Take a Long View of Your Life
A key to discovering your purpose, your meant-to-be, is to look at yourself as though you had reached the far end of your life. Ask yourself leading questions based on the assumption that you have had broad experience and acquired great wisdom. Step back and examine yourself as though you were a stranger.
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Then, as you contemplate the day in front of you, try to ask yourself these questions. If you have room on your mirror, copy them over and tape them there, too.
What are the opportunities for learning and growth today? For myself? For the people around me?
As you think of opportunities, form a plan, and ask:
When, where, and how will I embark on my plan?
When, where, and how make the plan concrete. How asks you to think of all the ways to bring your plan to life and make it work.
As you encounter the inevitable obstacles and setbacks, form a new plan and ask yourself the question again:
When, where, and how will I act on my new plan?
Regardless of how bad you may feel, chat with your fixed-mindset persona and then do it! And when you succeed, donât forget to ask yourself:
What do I have to do to maintain and continue the growth?
Do not now seek the answers, which cannot be given you because you would not be able to live them. And the point is,to live everything. Live the questions now. Perhaps you will then gradually, without noticing it, live along some distant day into the answer. Perhaps you do carry within yourself the possibility of shaping and forming as a particularly happy and pure way of living; train yourself to it - but take whatever comes with great trust, and only if comes out of your own will, out of some need of your inmost being, take it upon yourself and hate nothing.
What you do for a living shapes who you become. If you spend most of your day in paradigmatic mode, youâre likely to slip into depersonalized habits of thought; you may begin to regard storytelling as non-rigorous or childish, and if you do that, you will constantly misunderstand people. So when Iâm in a conversation with someone now, Iâm trying to push against that and get us into narrative mode. Iâm no longer content to ask, âWhat do you think about X?â Instead, I ask, âHow did you come to believe X?â This is a framing that invites people to tell a story about what events led them to think the way they do. Similarly, I donât ask people to tell me about their values; I say, âTell me about the
person who shaped your values most.â That prompts a story. Then there is the habit of taking people back in time: Whereâd you grow up? When did you know that you wanted to spend your life this way? Iâm not shy about asking people about their childhoods: What did you want to be when you were a kid? What did your parents want you to be? Finally, I try to ask about intentions and goals. When people are talking to you about their intentions, they are implicitly telling you about where they have been and where they hope to go. Recently, for example, my wife and I were sitting around with a brilliant woman who had retired from a job sheâd held for many years. We asked her a simple question: How do you hope to spend the years ahead? All sorts of stuff spilled out: How she was coping with losing the identity that her job had given her.
Act your way into a new way of thinking and being. You cannot discover yourself by introspection.
Start by changing what you do. Try different paths. Take action, and then use the feedback from your actions to figure out what you want. Donât try to analyze or plan your way into a new career. Conventional strategies advocated by self-assessment manuals and traditional career counselors would have you start by looking inside. Start instead by stepping out. Be attentive to what each step teaches you, and make sure that each step helps you take the next.
How do you move further along on your own path toward a good life? First, by recognizing that the good life is not a destination. It is the path itself, and the people who are walking it with you. As you walk, second by second you can decide to whom and to what you give your attention. Week by week you can prioritize your relationships and choose to be with the people who matter. Year by year you can find purpose and meaning through the lives that you enrich and the relationships that you cultivate. By developing your curiosity and reaching out to othersâfamily, loved ones, coworkers, friends, acquaintances, even strangersâwith one thoughtful question at a time, one moment of devoted, authentic attention at a time, you strengthen the foundation of a good life.