“How hurtful it can be to deny one’s true self and live a life of lies just to appease others.” – June Ahern
This is the finest chance to identify who you are.
This time effectively utilized with help all of us in the subsequent days to remain compatible and deal with the world in a stronger manner.
“Knowing yourself is the beginning of all wisdom.” ―Aristotle
Once you know yourself, you will become more confident, you will understand your purpose, and you will start producing a bigger impact on the world.
When we know who we are, we learn what we desire to perform.
The finest and most important adventure of our lives is identifying who we really are.
In order to discover who we are and why we act the way we do, we have to identify our own story.
Ralph Waldo Emerson said,
“The greatest discoveries are those that shed light unto ourselves.”
Albert Einstein once said this:
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
You have to figure out yourself and identify your strengths.
Are we fish struggling to climb the tree or fish in the ocean and exploring the ocean and continuing our life what it meant to be!
Author Neale Donald Walsch:
“Your soul is who you are. Your body and your mind are what you use to experience who you are in the Realm of the Relative.”
“Knowing others is intelligence; knowing yourself is true wisdom. Mastering others is strength; mastering yourself is true power.” – Lao Tzu
At the foundation of our desires is living a life of purpose and meaning.
Sit alone for some time as we have the opportunity now to explore our inner self. We are restricted to be at home and it is wonderful moment to discover ourselves.
Be quiet and observe your true self. You cannot and will not be able to identify yourself until you take the time to be still. Once the mind is calm and not much distracted your true self will surface out.
Take inventory.
Buy a diary or notebook and reflect on your life so far. What have you attained? Do you have any major fears? Are you struggling against real obstacles? Have you set reasonable objectives? List down everything and identify which section has better to focus now.
Discover your Passions:
Note down all the work you preferred to achieve. And plan to start all those passions which trigger your inner self. Write it down.
Think about your hobby:
Look inside and analyze what hobby you choose to start, painting, playing music, writing, cooking, etc, retrospect and note down to commence with one now.
Read self-discovery books.
Start by becoming familiarized with the concept of self-discovery. Learn the meaning of a personal inventory and how to handle what you find. Reading books about the discovery of self will open new doors of insight and understanding. Read those books and write your thoughts.
Evaluate your relationships.
A substantial aspect of identifying our personality can be identified in our relationships. When we understand we will never truly know anyone else until we recognize our self, the usefulness of recognizing our self becomes even more visible.
You can ask a few dominant questions to identify yourself better
- What I am known for?
- What about myself do I admire most?
- Classify what I cherish most doing?
- Identify what brings me joy
- What prospects of my life do I choose to see a transformation in?
- What did I choose to accomplish?
- What are my fears?
- What am I thankful for?
- Am I content working out what I’m presently working?
- What are the most remarkable things I’ve gained in life?
- Who inspires me the most and what is it that inspires me about them?
- What do I believe in?
- What have I accomplished in my life that I am most proud of?
- What is my biggest core value?
- How do I feel about your parents?
- Let me write my own obituary. What I will be writing?
Self-discovery contributes to self-mastery.
Write your own biography:
We can work out this as a mental exercise or in a paper, but the idea is to choose a devoted look backward on our own past as objectively as desirable. Take the time to investigate the choices we have made and question why we made them. Study about the comment we have obtained from colleagues and co-workers. Most specially, even though, be tough on ourselves and sink into our disappointments. When we are walking through that biography, study about how we have been greedy, unpleasant, or cruel. Study about why we were that way. The outcome is to have a better sense of ourselves, so root out as much as we can from our own past. Once we have that biography in hand, we might be astonished at just how much we didn’t know about ourselves before we started.
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