
Combine SMART goals with Transactional Analysis. Align your Inner Parent, Adult, and Child for success. Shop self-therapeutic diaries and tools at MriyaRun.
"The Inner Child Wants, The Parent Checks": A Psychological Upgrade to the SMART System
We've all heard of SMART. This acronym is the "sacred cow" of time management. A goal must be Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Relevant, and Time-bound. But be honest: how many perfectly written SMART goals have you abandoned after a week?
The problem with the classic approach is that it often ignores our psychology. We write goals with our "heads," forgetting about emotions and internal resistance.
The slide you provided illustrates the approach of Julie Hay (a renowned Transactional Analysis expert). She offers a brilliant way to test a goal through our three ego states: Parent, Adult, and Child.
Let's break down how this works and why it is more effective than standard to-do lists.
Measurability: The Inner Parent Speaks
“Can my Inner Parent check if I am doing my homework?”
In Transactional Analysis, the Parent is the part of us responsible for rules, norms, control, and care. It is our internal controller.
When you set a goal, it must be formulated clearly enough so that your Inner Parent can tick the box.
- What it looks like: Instead of the abstract "I want to learn English" (the Parent doesn't know how to verify this), say: "I want to complete 10 lessons by the end of the month."
- The psychological nuance: If the criteria are vague, the Inner Parent starts to get anxious or criticizes you for "doing nothing." Clarity calms this part of your psyche.
Attainability: Analysis by the Inner Adult
“Does my Inner Adult believe that I can realistically achieve this goal?”
The Adult is your internal computer. It has no emotions; it operates on facts, resources, and logic. It evaluates reality in the "here and now."
- What it looks like: You want to run a marathon in a month, but you get winded on the second floor. Your "Child" might scream "I want a medal!", but the "Adult" will calmly say: "That’s impossible without injury. We need 6 months of training."
- The psychological nuance: If you ignore the Adult, you will quickly burn out upon colliding with harsh reality.
Motivation: Energy of the Inner Child
“Does my Inner Child actually want this?”
This is perhaps the most critical point often lost in corporate training. The Child is the source of our desires, creativity, energy, and "wants." It is the Child that provides the "fuel" for achieving the goal.
- What it looks like: You set a goal to "Get an MBA" because it's prestigious (Parent voice) and good for your career (Adult voice). But if your Inner Child is bored and wants to paint pictures, you will constantly procrastinate.
- The psychological nuance: Ask yourself: "Does this drive me? Do I feel joy imagining the result?" If the Child says "No," no amount of willpower will help you reach the end without forcing yourself.
Summary: How to Reach an Agreement with Yourself?
This approach transforms goal setting from boring planning into an internal meeting, where everyone has a vote:
- The Child says: "I want this!" (provides energy).
- The Adult says: "Okay, here is a plan to make it real" (provides tools).
- The Parent says: "Good, I will make sure we stick to the discipline and praise us at the end" (provides structure and support).
Only when all three parts agree does the goal become truly SMART.
Who slammed the brakes?
- ? Bored, lazy, sleepy? -> Inner Child sabotage.Solution: Add a game, a reward, or a creative element to the goal.
- ? Scared, "it's not perfect", "I'm not ready"? -> Inner Parent sabotage.
- Solution: Lower your expectations. Allow yourself to do a "good enough" job, but get it done.
- ? Lacking time, money, or knowledge? -> Inner Adult issue.
- Solution: Rewrite the plan. Break the elephant into smaller pieces. Find a tutorial.
Insight from MriyaRun
The best place for "peace talks" between your Inner Parent, Adult, and Child is on paper. When we keep goals in our heads, internal voices often talk over one another. But when you start writing, the magic of structuring kicks in.
Journaling is not just about listing tasks. It is a therapeutic act that allows:
- The Child to express dreams and emotions through creativity;
- The Adult to see a tangible action plan on paper;
- The Parent to ensure that everything is under control.
Start the dialogue with yourself in the right space. Our MriyaRun self-therapeutic diaries are designed specifically to help you hear all parts of your personality and turn dreams into attainable goals.
Find your perfect diary here: MriyaRun Diaries
Example 1: Business Goal (Creating a Product)
Initial thought: "I finally want to launch my online course."
- ? Inner Parent (Control): "How will I verify you aren't slacking off? I need a strict schedule, not daydreams."
- ? Inner Adult (Reality): "We have 2 hours of free time in the evenings. To finish the course in a month, we need to write 1 lesson every 3 days."
- ? Inner Child (Desire): "Writing is boring! I want to film beautiful videos and get praise on Instagram!"
✅ Result (SMART + TA):
"I will record 10 video lessons by the 30th (Parent's demand). I allocate Tuesday and Thursday evenings for this (Adult's plan). After recording each lesson, I buy myself a delicious coffee and post backstage content to Stories to get likes (Child's joy)."
Example 2: Personal Goal (Fitness)
Initial thought: "I need to start running on Monday."
- ? Inner Parent (Care/Criticism): "You need to lose weight. But be careful not to catch a cold, wear a hat!"
- ? Inner Adult (Logic): "It's raining on Monday. And we haven't run in 5 years. Starting with 5km is unrealistic; we'll get injured."
- ? Inner Child (Protest): "I don't want to wake up early! I want to sleep and I want new bright sneakers!"
- MriyaRun | Psych Journals, Workbooks & MAC Cards
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