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The goal you’ve been told to set is probably too big. Not because you’re not capable. Not because you’re thinking too small. But because the kind of goal that transforms your relationship with money isn’t the one that looks impressive on a vision board. It’s the one your nervous system can actually tolerate. And there is a significant difference between the two. Why Money Goal Setting Backfires When Ambition LeadsYou’ve heard it before. Dream big. Set audacious goals. Visualize your highest self — the income, the freedom, the life that reflects what you know you deserve. And it feels good, for a moment. Then something happens. The body contracts. Anxiety spikes quietly beneath the motivation. Or nothing happens at all — the goal feels so removed from your current reality that your nervous system dismisses it entirely, the way a smoke detector might go off so often you stop hearing it. The vision board stays on the wall. The number stays the same. This isn’t a failure of imagination. It’s a failure of target selection. At the Institute, we call the optimal expansion target your Phobia Exposure Target — or PET. And setting it correctly is the difference between stagnation and genuine momentum in your income. The 20-30% Rule: What Your Nervous System Needs to MoveThe principle behind the PET comes from exposure therapy research, where phobias are treated not through immediate confrontation with the feared stimulus, but through graduated, tolerable exposure over time. For wealth, the translation is precise: your target should sit approximately 20-30% beyond your current Invisible Fence — not 300%. This doesn’t mean thinking small. It means thinking accurately. We observe at the Institute that clients who choose targets 20-30% above their current Fence tend to show faster habituation than those who aim dramatically higher. The body can process a 20-30% expansion. It can begin to experience that income level as survivable, even desirable. A 300% leap activates the same threat response that keeps the Fence in place in the first place. How to Find Your NumberStep one is identifying where your Fence actually sits — not where you hope it is, but where your nervous system currently treats as the ceiling. This is usually the number that, when you imagine consistently earning it, produces a subtle tightening. A mild anxiety you’ve learned to dismiss as ambition nerves. That reaction isn’t ambition. It’s your biological defense system activating. Common signs the number is real:
Once you’ve identified the number, calculate 20-30% above it. That is your Phobia Exposure Target. What Makes a PET Different from a Stretch GoalThe corporate concept of a stretch goal assumes that ambition is the limiting factor. Stretch goals are designed to push past comfort and force performance upward. The PET assumes something different: that it is your nervous system, not your ambition, holding the ceiling in place. This changes the nature of the target entirely. A stretch goal asks: How far can you push yourself? A PET asks: What is the maximum expansion your nervous system can currently tolerate without activating its defenses? It is a calibration instrument, not a motivational poster. The Income Goals Nervous System CheckBefore finalising your PET, run this brief check. When you imagine consistently earning your target amount — not as a windfall, but as your new normal — what happens in your body?
The PET should produce a response that is uncomfortable but not overwhelming. That productive discomfort is precisely the exposure zone where habituation happens. The Institute FindingWe observe that clients who reach their first PET and immediately set a second often report noticeably faster expansion at the second level. The nervous system learns from each completed cycle. What felt uncomfortable at one threshold becomes ordinary — and the next threshold becomes accessible. This is not magic. It is habituation. The same mechanism that allows someone who feared public speaking to eventually address a full room with ease. Your body learns what is safe through repeated, tolerable exposure. Your PET is how you begin. This Week’s PracticeIdentify your Invisible Fence. Be honest — the body knows the number, even if the mind resists naming it. Add 20-30%. Write that number down. Not on a vision board. In a notebook. As a data point, not a dream. Then hold it in mind for 60 seconds. Notice what happens in your body. That noticing — the willingness to be with the discomfort without retreating — is the beginning of the work. |
Find Your Invisible Fence
The 2-minute screening reveals whether your nervous system is protecting you from the very thing you are working toward.
Find My Invisible Fence
