Do you ever find yourself feeling like you don’t understand your own motives or choices? If you feel this way, you can learn why you do the things you do.
Life can be a whirlwind at times. Maybe you’ve just been too busy lately to spend time thinking about your priorities and goals.
One method to increase self-understanding is journaling your thoughts and feelings.
The idea of keeping a journal may sound strange to you; you might not think of yourself as a writer. Even non-writers keep journals, though. When you open yourself to journaling, you experience a new wealth of self-understanding.
Writing bits and pieces of your life experiences can be an incredible journey. Once you start thinking about something that happened to you in the past, you’ll find yourself remembering another story, then another.
Once you start making an effort to recall experiences from your past, you’ll trigger memories you haven’t thought about in years.
All of the experiences you’ll recall have combined to make you the person you are. To sort back through some of your life stories will help you understand yourself so much more.
Follow these steps to get started:
1. Decide how you’ll write your story. Will you use a spiral notebook and a pen? An art book and painting, colouring, sketching.
2. Don’t worry about starting at the beginning. Interestingly, a lot of people avoid trying to write down stories of their lives because they “can’t remember back that far.” Where you start the story isn’t important. Starting it is.
3. Think of your life as a series of short chapters. To simplify your story, each situation you recall can be a “chapter.” For example, you might remember the time your Uncle Al took you fishing and the canoe tipped over. Go directly to your journal and start to write.
4. Focus on getting the story down. Things like sentence structure, spelling, grammar, and the like aren’t all that important for now, unless you plan to publish your journal. You can deal with all those things later by going back through and editing the material.
5. The order of your stories is irrelevant. There are two suggested ways to do your stories on the computer:
* Use tabs to section years, or stages in your life.
* Or simply write all your stories in one journal. Open that journal when you feel like writing a story, and separate the stories by using chapter headings.
6. Document what you remember. Get down information about what happened, what you did, what you thought, and how you felt. These details will ultimately lead you to develop a better understanding of how you’ve lived your life as an adult.
Writing your life story is not all that difficult. If you follow some of these journaling methods and keep your focus off of the end result, you’ll find yourself recalling more and more parts of your life. Plus, you’ll learn to understand and even love yourself more than you ever have!
Start now to journal some of the stories from your life. Soon after, you’ll be glad you did!
Another option is to start doing it daily now, each week have an Artist Date to start writing what's happening now, each week. You can add photo's, bits and pieces from the week.
Want to dive deeper into you future Story check out our Finding me Course.
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