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How
to Discover Your Life’s Purpose from Today’s Leading Experts
Do you know your life’s purpose? Most people, at some point, wonder what
theirs is. We search for meaning and hope that our lives carry special
meaning. We sense, at a deep level, there is MORE to life. We can feel
it.
Discovering your life’s purpose is more like putting together a big puzzle
then it is finding a needle in a haystack. Like a puzzle, you need to
fit the right pieces together and in time a picture starts to emerge.
The picture that emerges will be made up of your special interests and
talents and preferences. It will represent the whole of your life. Every
piece is needed.
Unlike a puzzle you buy off a store shelf with all of the pieces already
contained in the box, the pieces to your life purpose puzzle come to you
one at a time, over a period of time. You will get each new piece when
you are ready for it and not a day sooner. And unlike the puzzle you buy
off the store shelf which supplies a picture of what the finished puzzle
should look like, your life purpose puzzle has no such guide available.
The picture that emerges will be one of a kind and each new piece will
add depth and meaning to the whole.
The following experts have written about discovering your purpose in great
detail. Below is a condensed version of their formulas and philosophies
for discovering your life’s purpose.
Richard Bolles
Richard Bolles is most famous for his yearly job-hunting book, What
Color is Your Parachute.
His formula for discovering your life’s “mission” is as follows:
1. To stand, hour by hour in the conscious presence of God, the One from
whom your Mission is derived.
2. To do what you can, moment by moment, day by day, step by step, to
make this world a better place, following the leading and guidance of
God’s Spirit within you and around you.
3. a) to exercise that Talent which you particularly came to Earth to
use – your greatest gift, which you most delight to use,
b) in the place(s) or setting(s) which God has caused to appeal to you
the most,
c) and for those purposes which God most needs to have done in the world.
Whew! That’s a mouthful. Basically he is saying we all come here with
a purpose to somehow SERVE our fellow man. We are given unique talents
that, when leveraged, will be HOW we serve our fellow man. Our talents
will provide the vehicle through which we express and share our gifts
with others.
Special note: In What Color is Your Parachute the following quote
can be found which offers a simple formula for discovering your purpose:
“The place God calls you to is the place where your deep gladness and
the world’s deep hunger meet.” Fred Buechner
Jack Canfield
Jack Canfield is America’s Success Coach and co-founder of Chicken
Soup for the Soul.
Canfield sums up purpose this way:
“You were born with an inner guidance system that tells you when you are
on or off purpose by the amount of joy you are experiencing. The things
that bring you the greatest joy are in alignment with your purpose”
He states what you are here to do is what will give you the greatest amount
of joy when you are doing it. In his book, The Success Principles,
he offers the following Life Purpose Exercise:
1. List two of your unique personal qualities, such as enthusiasm
and creativity.
2. List one or two ways you enjoy expressing those qualities when interacting
with others, such as to support and to inspire.
3. Assume the world is perfect right now. What does this world look like?
How is everyone interacting with everyone else? What does it feel like?
Write your answer as a statement, in the present tense, describing the
ultimate condition, the perfect world as you see it and feel it. Remember,
a perfect world is a fun place to be.
Example: Everyone is freely expressing their own unique talents. Everyone
is working in harmony. Everyone is expressing love.
4. Combine the three prior subdivisions of this paragraph into a single
statement.
Example: My purpose is to use my creativity and enthusiasm to support
and inspire others to freely express their talents in a harmonious and
loving way.
Finally, he states that without a purpose in life, it’s easy to get sidetracked
on your life’s journey. It’s easy to wander and drift, accomplishing little.
But with purpose, everything in life seems to fall into place. To be “on
purpose” means you’re doing what you love to do, doing what you’re good
at and accomplishing what’s important to you.
Richard Leider & David Shapiro
In their book, Repacking Your Bags: How to Live with a New Sense of
Purpose they write:
“Purpose is your reason for being, your answer to the question, “Why do
I get up in the morning?” It is the spiritual core that helps us find
the aliveness in all our day-to-day experiences.”
They go on to say, “You use your purpose to set your course in life. It’s
the qualities around which you center yourself. Without a clear sense
of purpose, you are at the mercy of shifting terrain of the outside world.
Having a purpose, though, enables you to refind your direction and then
direct your way there.
They offer the following formula for discovering your purpose:
(Your Talents + Your Passions + Your Preferred Environment) x Your Ideal
Vision of Life = Lifestyle Rich in Purpose
Discover your unique talents and passions. Understand which environments
you like to work best and put these things together in a way that serves
the vision you have for Life.
How to Discover Your Life’s Purpose
The first step in discovering your life’s purpose is to believe there
is a purpose to your life. The second step is to keep asking what that
purpose is.
Nothing is going to drop from the sky announcing a grand purpose for your
life. That is something you get to decide. You’ll discover your purpose
when you put the unique puzzle pieces of your life together in a way that
makes sense to you.
Each of the experts above has their own formula for discovering your purpose
but they all have these things in common:
1. When living on purpose you are living from your center, your spiritual
core/you are somehow connected to God
2. Living on purpose requires you to discover what makes you unique; talents,
passions and values
3. Living on purpose requires you to leverage what makes you unique for
the sake of serving others / making the world a better place.
4. When you live on purpose, your life will be filled with meaning and
joy.
Discovering your purpose is a worthwhile pursuit and once you discover
it your life will feel very on track. You will still need to do the work
to bring your purpose to life. But your actions will be filled with meaning.
There will be a depth to your life.
As Joseph Campbell writes in The Power of Myth, “We are having
experiences all the time which may on occasion render some sense of this,
a little intuition of where your bliss is. Grab it. No one can tell you
what it is going to be. You have to learn to recognize your own depth.”
©2006
Cari Vollmer / LifeOnTrack(tm) / LifeOnTrack.com
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