All goals are relative: building from a firm point of view

By George Margi Categories: Philosophy
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About Course

Every objective needs a reference point. Without a clear concept to give it meaning and direction, a goal loses strength, becomes scattered and lacks impact. Relativity reminds us that building from an anchor is key to moving forward with purpose.

What Will You Learn?

  • What a functional goal is in training.
  • Why goals often fail without a clear reference.
  • The concept of the anchor as a structural base.
  • How to define clear, actionable, and observable goals.
  • Real examples of anchored goals on court.
  • Different types of anchors: the ball, the court, the body, the opponent, the emotional context.
  • How the anchor gives direction and purpose to every session.

Course Content

What Is a Goal? Every Goal Needs an Anchor
A goal is not just a wish or an intention. For it to carry real strength and lead to transformation, it must be built in relation to something. A goal needs an anchor —a clear reference point from which it gains meaning, direction, and usefulness.

  • What Is a Goal? Every Goal Needs an Anchor

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