The Power 12 Minute Increments | DFS 403
Destined For SuccessJune 15, 2026x
403
15:5121.77 MB

The Power 12 Minute Increments | DFS 403

Get all the inside secrets and tools you need to help you develop your intuitive and leadership skills so you are on the path to the highest level of success with ease. Long-term success isn't built by reacting to today's challenges—it's created through intentional decisions that position your future self for greater freedom, impact, and abundance. p

Big success is created through small, consistent actions, and even 12 focused minutes can build momentum toward the life you want.

In this episode you will learn:

  • Big goals become achievable in small increments
  • Consistency beats intensity
  • Momentum creates belief

If you know you want a guide on your path to success, book YOUR SUCCESS CALL today!

If you are ready to start reaching your goals instead of simply dreaming about it, start today with 12minutegift.com!

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Are you ready to tiptoe into your intuition and tap into your soul’s message? Let’s talk

Listen in as Jennifer Takagi, founder of Takagi Consulting, Certified High Performance Coach, 5X time Amazon.Com Best Selling-Author, Certified Soul Care Coach, Certified Jack Canfield Success Principle Trainer, Certified Professional Behavioral Analyst and Facilitator of the DISC Behavioral Profiles, Certified Change Style Indicator Facilitator, Law of Attraction Practitioner, and Certified Coaching Specialist - leadership entrepreneur, speaker and trainer, shares the lessons she’s learned along the way. Each episode is designed to give you the tools, ideas, and inspiration to lead with integrity. Humor is a big part of Jennifer’s life, so expect a few puns and possibly some sarcasm. Tune in for a motivational guest, a story or tips to take you even closer to that success you’ve been coveting. Please share the episodes that inspired you the most and be sure to leave a comment.

Official Website: http://www.jennifertakagi.com

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jennifertakagi/

Facebook: facebook.com/takagiconsulting

I look forward to connecting with you soon,

Jennifer Takagi

Speaker, Trainer, Author, Energy Healer

PS: We would love to hear from you! For questions, coaching, or to book interviews, please email my team at Jennifer@takagiconsulting.com

Jennifer Takagi:

Welcome to Destin for Success. I'm your

Jennifer Takagi:

host, Jennifer Takagi, your 12 minute success coach. And today

Jennifer Takagi:

I want to talk about the power of 12 minute increments. You've

Jennifer Takagi:

heard me talk about it before. I'm actually getting trademarked

Jennifer Takagi:

for that. It's really amazing, but I want to break it down and

Jennifer Takagi:

bring this home a little bit more. Big goals become

Jennifer Takagi:

achievable in small increments. We get overwhelmed when we focus

Jennifer Takagi:

on the entire mountain instead of the next few steps. When we

Jennifer Takagi:

break goals into small increments, it creates progress

Jennifer Takagi:

without paralysis. My mother had a massive stroke when she was 62

Jennifer Takagi:

years old, and it wiped out the whole right side of her brain.

Jennifer Takagi:

It was the size of a grapefruit, and we didn't know if she'd ever

Jennifer Takagi:

be able to do anything again. It was a right brain stroke. She

Jennifer Takagi:

was completely paralyzed on her left side, and she didn't make

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progress, and she lived 11 years, and we had a lot of

Jennifer Takagi:

laughs, a lot of tears, and you know it's just.. it's

Jennifer Takagi:

devastating when you lose your mother, but she did have.. we

Jennifer Takagi:

did have a lot of fun off and on throughout those years, and when

Jennifer Takagi:

she was in the hospital, we had to start keeping track on a my

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one sister's a teacher now, a principal, principal of the

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year, by the way, and she had a spiral notebook in the car, so

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she ran out and got that, and we had to start tracking when mom

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got her pain meds because she was no longer in intensive care

Jennifer Takagi:

and in a regular room. I don't know if this was a hospital rule

Jennifer Takagi:

or if the nurses just made it up. I don't really know, but mom

Jennifer Takagi:

had to push the button or somebody did on her behalf and

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ask for pain meds, and she could have a shot of, I guess, it was

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morphine, I don't know, every four hours, and her stroke and

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brain bleed was so big that it literally pushed her brain off

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center with the swelling, and so with that swelling she had an

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incredible headache, and so the pain medicine was for the

Jennifer Takagi:

headache until the brain started healing, and she wasn't in pain

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anymore, so we had to track when she had her last pain

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medication, so we could call and then bring it in, and the nurse

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would come in and say, 'Ma'am, did you want pain medicine, and

Jennifer Takagi:

you know her speech originally was a little bit slurred. She

Jennifer Takagi:

got to where she could talk really well, but she was like,

Jennifer Takagi:

yes, anything, my head is killing me. And so we start

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tracking it, and once that headache went down

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substantially, and we could really start interacting with

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her more, she was on less pain meds. She was sad and depressed

Jennifer Takagi:

of all the things she couldn't do, and she kept telling me, "I

Jennifer Takagi:

didn't have a stroke, I didn't have a stroke, and I didn't know

Jennifer Takagi:

what to do with this information. So I trapped one of

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the nurses in the hall, and I was like, "I don't know what to

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do. She keeps saying she didn't have a stroke, and she goes,

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then tell her to get up and go home, and I was like, what, and

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she goes, well, she didn't have a stroke, then she can get up

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and get dressed and go home, and I was like, okay, so mom started

Jennifer Takagi:

in, well, I didn't have a stroke, and she had again

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slurred speech there originally, and I said, "Mom, if you didn't

Jennifer Takagi:

have a stroke, then get up, get dressed, and go home. And she

Jennifer Takagi:

goes, "I can't. And I said, "Why not? She goes, "I guess I had a

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stroke, but it took us a while to get there that she had a

Jennifer Takagi:

stroke.

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And then she was like, oh my gosh, I had a stroke, now

Jennifer Takagi:

looked, and she initially could not swallow, and so finally she

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could swallow, and she loved Dr Pepper, and so we started

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tracking in that notebook everything she could do today

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that she couldn't do yesterday, and it started with a Dr Pepper,

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and then she was able to eat like oatmeal or something like

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soft foods, and we just kept adding to that every single day

Jennifer Takagi:

what she could do, and then she would get discouraged, and I'd

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say, "Mom, let's go through the list of all the things you can

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do today that you couldn't do the day you had the stroke, and

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every day for the longest time she could do a little bit more,

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a little bit more, a little bit more, so it wasn't a matter of

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her getting up and walking initially. But she did

Jennifer Takagi:

eventually. She started walking, so if we can focus on the

Jennifer Takagi:

outcome. Oops, something just fell off my desk. If we can

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focus on the outcome, but little increments to get to the

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outcome, like have a sip of Dr Pepper, and you can swallow it

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without choking. Perfect. We create progress without

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paralysis. We didn't say, 'Mom, get up and eat a whole meal. It

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was, 'Take one sip. So, what's that one little thing that you

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can do? Consistency beats intensity every time. A little

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progress every day is way more powerful than occasional bursts

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of motivation. I've had clients prove it again and again, as

Jennifer Takagi:

well as for myself. 12 focused minutes repeated consistently

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can change your business, your health, your relationships, your

Jennifer Takagi:

confidence over time, a little bit all the time. I spoke

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recently, maybe on the last episode, about quitting smoking,

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and in one of the smoking cessations programs that I was

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trying, said if you can't walk because you're out of breath,

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you're overweight, you've smoked forever, you can't get a breath,

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walk for one minute and then come back, walk for two minutes

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and then come back and keep adding a minute, and then they

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recommended you put one small pebble or rock in each pocket,

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so now you're walking with weights, and keep adding to it a

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little bit at a time, and pretty soon you can do it. I saw an

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amazing video of an overweight gentleman who couldn't even walk

Jennifer Takagi:

because he was overweight, and he started doing a little bit

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every day, and now he can walk, because he just built up a

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little muscle, a little muscle, a little stamina, a little

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stamina. What do you want to learn to do? What is it that

Jennifer Takagi:

would make the biggest difference in your life if you

Jennifer Takagi:

could achieve it. One thing I loved about being in

Jennifer Takagi:

Toastmasters, which is to help with speaking, is you often

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started out with a one minute speech, and then a two minute,

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and then a five minute, and they kept adding on. You didn't start

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out with a 15 minute talk, it was little increments that were

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like well thought out. I had been baking in the kitchen with

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my mom since I, I definitely remember first grade. I was

Jennifer Takagi:

baking in the kitchen with my mom, I don't know if it was

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before that or not, but first grade, absolutely for sure. I

Jennifer Takagi:

know exactly where we lived. Our address was 10328 and I remember

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baking a cake, and it was in a nine by 13 pan, it was a yellow

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cake, and it was a mix, and I said, oh, look, the cake's dead,

Jennifer Takagi:

and my mom said, no, it isn't, leave it in there, and I was

Jennifer Takagi:

like, no, it's done. She goes, no, it's not. Leave it in there.

Jennifer Takagi:

And we argued and argued, and every few minutes I'd say, it's

Jennifer Takagi:

done, I'm pulling it out, and she'd say, it's not done, leave

Jennifer Takagi:

it in there. And so, finally, she just really got tired of me

Jennifer Takagi:

being a pest, and she said, fine, pull it out, pulled it out

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in a few minutes.

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The center of that cake collapsed because it was raw and

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it was my mom and dad and then four of us kids and so we pretty

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much kill a cake in an evening after dinner and so we just had

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to eat all around the perimeter of the cake I wasn't very good

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initially I had to practice I had to get better. I now bake

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cakes, I bake cookies, I decorate cookies, and some of

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them are spectacular, and some are just kind of half ass. Okay,

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it just depends. But I didn't start out very good. It took

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practice. Michelle Abraham, who produces my podcast, or Company

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Amplify You, produces this podcast, and she gives talks on

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podcasting, and she says if you listen to your first few

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episodes and they're really good, you waited too long to

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start a podcast. Why? Because you get better, you get better

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with practice, you get better over time, and when you take

Jennifer Takagi:

that big goal that you really want to achieve and you break it

Jennifer Takagi:

down into smaller increments, that consistency builds and

Jennifer Takagi:

builds and. That momentum creates belief. Every completed

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increment builds confidence. When people take one small

Jennifer Takagi:

action, they begin proving to themselves that they can follow

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through, and that's so important for our brains. Jennifer is the

Jennifer Takagi:

kind of gal that does what she says she's going to do. She

Jennifer Takagi:

finishes what she starts. It's a very big thing that you follow

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through with what you say, and that momentum often leads to

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bigger action naturally. You might start with just walking to

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the mailbox and back, "My mailbox is not very far, it's

Jennifer Takagi:

not very far from my front door. I go days at a time without

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checking the mail, just because I'm lazy, but I don't want to do

Jennifer Takagi:

it. But if I want to walk further, I can walk around the

Jennifer Takagi:

block, I can walk around the block, and then I can add

Jennifer Takagi:

another, another time, and another time if I want to show

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up more consistently on social media, I can spend 12 minutes

Jennifer Takagi:

and create a graphic, a social media post, a quote, and I can

Jennifer Takagi:

go back and I can do it again and again and again and again,

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build that momentum, do it incrementally. Those increments

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add up. The biggest problem most people have is they never start

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because it looks too big and too hard. But I promise you, if you

Jennifer Takagi:

start little and just do one little thing, you're gonna do

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more, and you're gonna do better. I had a gentleman that

Jennifer Takagi:

was not a client, we were actually colleagues in a

Jennifer Takagi:

mastermind group together, and he wanted to write a book, and I

Jennifer Takagi:

said, "Let's talk about it. Let me, let me help you break that

Jennifer Takagi:

book down. And he goes, "Okay. He goes, "So I just sit at my

Jennifer Takagi:

computer every day for 12 minutes and stare at the screen,

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even if I don't have anything to say, that's not how this works.

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I said, do you do what you want to write about? He goes, well,

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this, that, the other. I said, all right, your first 12 minutes

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is to make a whole list of all the things you possibly would

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want to write about, and write them down, spend 12 minutes

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brainstorming that, and then walk away. Or, if you have 12

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more minutes, then I want you to close your eyes for 30 seconds,

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think of nothing, open your eyes, and the first three things

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that jump off the page, circle them. Why? Because that's what

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your subconscious wanted to go. Great, now you have three

Jennifer Takagi:

possible topics. Next step, come back to it and list all the

Jennifer Takagi:

stories you could tell about one of those topics. Next 12

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minutes, same thing, next hell minutes same thing, then you can

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start to see a pattern. Are all three of those topics something

Jennifer Takagi:

that could be in one book, or are those three books again? If

Jennifer Takagi:

you didn't know it, I'm a best-selling author.

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I think at least six of my books that I've written 100% on my own

Jennifer Takagi:

have been best sellers on Amazon, and then I've been in

Jennifer Takagi:

compilation books, I think four that have been international

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bestsellers, and I like a short book because I want to get to

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the point, I want to get to the point, and I want to tell you

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what to do to make it better. Boom, end of story. You want to

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write a long book. Great, write a long one. I like short ones,

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because I read short ones that have something actionable to do.

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It doesn't have to be overwhelming, it doesn't have to

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be huge. You want to get your story out in a blog, great,

Jennifer Takagi:

write a blog, spend 12 minutes, it doesn't take that long. You

Jennifer Takagi:

can start breaking things down into small increments and make

Jennifer Takagi:

huge, powerful choices in your life. I'm Jennifer Takagi, your

Jennifer Takagi:

12 minute success coach, and I look forward to connecting with

Jennifer Takagi:

you soon. You can click the link at the end of every episode, and

Jennifer Takagi:

it says "your success call, and you can book a call with me, and

Jennifer Takagi:

let me help you start breaking your big goals into 12 minute

Jennifer Takagi:

increments. It's a free call, book it. Let's do this thing,

Jennifer Takagi:

do.