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Being Open-Minded in Your Life Improvement Comments Off

Life becomes dangerous when we walk blindly in the paths others have laid out. Why? Because nobody has ever had it all figured out. But we love the ease and comfort of the familiar. It is easier to follow the well-worn groove than to make the effort to get out of it and forge ahead for ourselves.

We want others to like us, to emulate us, to approve of us, to admire our decisions, our lives. We want a pat on the head. We want the general consensus of others around us to be that we’ve got it pretty well figured out. So we take the paths that seem familiar because we know instinctively that, like us, others tend to approve of what is familiar without ever questioning it. We get the approval. But do we ever get the life we really want?

As women, we are especially susceptible to seeking the approval of others around us. Something in our emotional construction longs for the security of knowing we have pleased, we are approved, we have somehow met the mark. But how often do we stop to ask whose mark we are so desperately trying to meet? Is someone else’s standard my only measurement for a successful life?

I seem traditional to some people, but the catch is that the traditions I uphold in my life I have chosen consciously, recognizing what they are and the value they hold for me. The traditions that have no validity and no value I choose to reject: not because I hate the past or because I want to rebel against my family legacies, but because blind adherence to tradition never improves my life. I am a stay-at-home mom and a work-from-home writer. I enjoy traditional “domestic” activities like cooking and gardening; I also love playing guitar, traveling, meeting new people, and going to skateboard parks with my husband. I spend a lot of time trying to improve how I do what I do, and probably an equal amount of time trying to improve who I am. Personal growth is a big part of life improvement for me.

Take adventures in seeking, constantly, to improve your life by questioning assumptions, examining cultural norms and traditions, and taking time to think through both your daily habits and your lifelong beliefs. Such activity is not for the faint-hearted or the close-minded. We all have strong emotional attachments to our assumptions. A defense system we don’t even recognize most of the time jumps into action as soon as something dear to us is questioned, even if the questioning will lead us to a better, safer, and freer life. Questions frighten us. We have made decisions based on assumptions and we fear that questioning those assumptions will cause our lives to crumble around us.

“Every new beginning comes from some other beginning’s end.” (Semisonic)

Without questions, without honesty, without risk, our lives will crumble. At best we will live and die in mediocrity. The atrophy of a mind and heart never fully used will cause our lives to deteriorate into something passionless, useless, and pointless. Life was not meant to be lived without purpose and freedom. It is only by asking difficult questions and seeking real wisdom that we find both purpose and freedom, and in finding them we find a passion for life.

I hope you are open-minded enough to seek more than the rut you have been walking. I hope you are willing to take risks, to ask questions, to examine your own life honestly, to put aside assumptions, to seek true value. Do you want comfort, or do you want real wisdom? Do you want familiarity, or do you want freedom?

Improving your life is more than sitting around, theorizing about the big questions in life. Our lives are composed of a collection of small things, mostly, and thinking about those small things is how we make our lives richer and better. All the little things – from how you cook a meal, or organize your desk, or shop for birthday gifts to how you implement frugality, change your morning routine, or choose what book to read next – make the big differences that take us from mediocrity to excitement.

I said before that no one has it all figured out; I certainly don’t. My mission is to find out what I can and continually change and improve my life with every day. Many of the things I write about are very simple, practical applications for the daily business of life: how-tos, recipes, life hacks, tips, methods. Some are more theoretical, my own process of examining the “bigger” things in life.

Take risks. Let life be an adventure and not a drudgery. Trade in those assumptions for something real. You may walk away with the same basic lifestyle and beliefs, but they will be grounded on your own decisions, not on a past that you may or may not want to become your future. Reject the fear and the passivity and seek what is real. “Say to wisdom, ‘You are my sister.’” (Proverbs 7:4)

Why Purpose Is Difficult to Pursue 1

Goals without purpose become meaningless exercises and doom you to frustration. I can set a goals in the best way with specific definitions and deadlines and hints and helps and accountability and triggers and I can still fail. Goals need to mean something because goals require change and it is our default as lazy, fearful people to resist change.

Not to get you down, but…
We need to admit that we are lazy and we are fearful. Most of what we want to accomplish in life is possible for us. Money is there to be made. Time is ours to use as we will. Relationships become what we put into them. People treat us as we allow them to. The responsibility rests on us. My life is my own and if I let you control is, it is my fault. Shame on you, certainly, for seeking to control, but a greater shame on me for victimizing myself.

Your Purpose Becomes Your Responsibility
Responsibility is part of purpose. Finding out your purpose creates an obligation upon you to fulfill that purpose. If you have value beyond today, if significance and satisfaction are possible, if you have a purpose beyond existing, then you alone are responsible for living up to that value, living in such a way as to be significant and create satisfaction by achieving your purpose. None of these things are impossible, but they require thought, commitment, effort, and diligence.

Striving for Your Purpose
If I fail to achieve my purpose, it is either because I was too afraid to find out what it was or because, upon finding out, I was too lazy to strive for it. To strive means to “endeavor with earnestness, to labor hard” and “to contend, to struggle in opposition to another.” Achieving your purpose means that you must not only work for something noble and big and beyond today, but you must work against your fears, your laziness, your old habits of mediocrity, and all the voices in your society and your past that point you in an easier direction.

Refuse to Waste Your Life
It may sound like I’m taking this all a little too seriously, but wasting a life is a serious thing. That life came from somewhere and is meant to do something. I believe God gave it to you. Whether you believe the White Dolphin of the Lost Sea gave it to you or your parents were just a little thoughtless with contraceptives, you still wake up every morning with a day to fill. You can settle for meaningless mediocrity, but you don’t really want to. If you do, it is only because laziness and fear have taken over and you have settled into victimization again.

Do better than be a victim for the rest of your life. Start taking control of your mind and emotions and body, one step at a time. Ignore that voice that says, “Forget this, it’s a waste of time.” Ignore that small, offended feeling at being called lazy and fearful. Ignore that urge to go get something to eat and settle in front of the tv. You were meant to be alive, not be a victim. Start finding your purpose.

How to Find Your Purpose

Finding your purpose is a personal exercise, and no chart or graph or checklist will really do it for you. Writing helps me, but that’s because I’m a writer. I get a piece of paper and start writing down the things that matter to me. From those, there are a few that really stand out, or that are repeated (different terms or phrases, same idea). Read How to Discover Your Life Purpose in About 20 Minutes by Steve Pavlina. Ask your friends and family what they think you are good at. This doesn’t mean that is your purpose, but it gives you a starting point if you find yourself totally stuck. What do you love? What gets you enthusiastic? What could you do and never get tired of doing? What is your idea of the perfect job? How do you wish you could change the world? What would you attempt if you had unlimited resources? What would you try if you knew you could not fail?

Answer those questions honestly, and try to find the common theme. Boil it down to something clear and quick and to the core. Then hold on to it and start thinking about how that purpose translates into the life you are living now.

Why You Need to Know Your Purpose Comments Off

Self-help programs often focus on purpose, what it is, how to find your own. What isn’t always said is why you need to spend time thinking about something as basic as your purpose in life.

Getting Beyond Basic

First, purpose isn’t so basic. Existence is basic; survival is basic. We survive – so that we can continue to exist – largely through instinct, which is also pretty basic. On those three points, we are no different than any other species on earth, which also live by their instincts in order to survive that they (and their kind) might continue existing. Of all the species, however, we are the only one writing poetry, building skyscrapers, reading books, and engaging in all sorts of other activities that are extraneous to mere existence. Existence requires no cappuccinos, no cigarettes, no movies or tattoos or sports or orchestras. The homo sapiens prefer to do more than exist.

Seeking a Greater Purpose
Humans, in general, seek purpose beyond survival. We want to know that we mean something, that we are significant, that we have value, that we contribute something to the universe. The fact that we seek a greater purpose indicates to me that we do have one. The animal and plant worlds exist happily without questioning their purpose; dolphins chatter, birds sing, monkeys play, lions stretch and roar, cats pounce, dogs wag their tails in perfect contentment to simply be. Humans with no purpose grumble, whine, get lazy, get depressed, get into drugs and bad relationships and destructive behavior, give up, kill themselves.

Identifying Purpose Brings Satisfaction

Dissatisfaction with life as it is indicates both the value of life and the possibility for satisfaction with it. Identifying your particular purpose for life is necessary to reaching satisfaction. You cannot meaningfully improve something if you do not know why you are seeking to improve it. Neither will you reach any goals if you set them arbitrarily. You can only muster up so much motivation to push yourself toward something that isn’t really significant for you. The process of improving your life can continue steadily only when you can set goals as they relate to your purpose. Goal-setting for the sake of goal-setting is a weary way to go.

Finding Your Particular Purpose
Finding your purpose is where most of us get stuck. We nod and agree that purpose is important. We recognize the desire we have for purpose. Then we pull out a piece of paper to define “my purpose in life” and either write down a trite phrase that really doesn’t mean anything or stare helplessly, feeling as blank as the paper.

Perhaps you already have a clear idea of your purpose. If so, you’re set to continue. If not, just make it simple: adopt as your purpose the goal of finding your purpose. A bit circular, yes, but it will be enough to keep you going for the next few steps.

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