Question
How do I apply the idea that purpose changes over time?
Quick Answer
Draw a simple timeline of your life divided into roughly five-year segments. For each segment, write down what felt like the driving purpose — what got you out of bed, what you organized your decisions around, what felt most important. Do not judge or edit. Just describe. Now look at the.
The most direct way to practice is through a focused exercise: Draw a simple timeline of your life divided into roughly five-year segments. For each segment, write down what felt like the driving purpose — what got you out of bed, what you organized your decisions around, what felt most important. Do not judge or edit. Just describe. Now look at the transitions between segments. Where did a purpose exhaust itself? Where did a new one emerge? Where are you right now — in the middle of a purpose, at the end of one, or in the disorienting gap between? Label each transition as a completion, a disruption, or a slow fade. This map is your personal purpose biography, and it is the foundation for understanding where you are headed next.
Common pitfall: Treating purpose change as purpose failure. When the thing that used to drive you stops working, the most common response is self-blame: something is wrong with me, I lost my way, I am having a crisis. This interpretation locks you into trying to resuscitate a purpose that has already served its function. The failure is not that your purpose changed. The failure is refusing to let it change — clinging to an expired map because updating it feels like admitting you were wrong.
This practice connects to Phase 72 (Purpose Discovery) — building it as a repeatable habit compounds over time.
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