Take Your Own Life Audit

The Must Have Habit For Living An Intentional Life.

Businesses perform audits of goods and services, management structures, staff performance and anything else relevant to the particular company. Often this results in internal adjustments and restructures.

 

On a personal level we can also benefit from stopping and reflecting on how we are travelling. Following great upheavals we might be forced by circumstance to take stock and assess how to deal with it, what needs to be done, what resources and options are available. But there is much to be gained by doing it as a regular practice. 

 

Instead of being carried along by life’s currents, taking stock allows you to make deliberate choices about how you conduct yourself and your life. It helps you re-focus goals, adjust or make new plans, shift your emphasis, correct your course if needed and direct your attention accordingly.

 

Assess what is working in your life and what is not.

Consider your relationships: are they nurturing, supportive and enhancing your life or are they dragging you down, interfering with progress and making your life more difficult? Do you need to distance yourself or stand your ground? What about the family dynamic – are you held back by the past or encouraged to create your own future? 

 

Evaluate your work situation. Is it satisfactory or a dead end? Are you in the right place? What keeps you there? What steps could you take to improve it? Would upgrading your skillset expand your options? 

 

What is your quality of life? How are you managing your spare time, your finances, physical and mental health? What can you do to increase satisfaction, fun, productivity?

 

Contemplate the consequences of your actions. Anything you do – or don’t do – has an effect somewhere. Is your approach useful and beneficial? Should you keep going as you are or make some form of course correction? If what you are doing is not working, take matters in your own hands. 

 

Choose your course of action.

You can of course do things as you have always done them and put up with irritations, conflicts or dysfunctional situations although it negates your ability to steer your own life course. You might feel locked into circumstances you cannot get out of. But if you take a really close look and evaluate what is going on, you will find something you can do to improve the situation.

 

Your life audit may give you clarity what you do not want anymore. But you also have to  determine what it is you want. Other people might try and tell you the direction to take.  Don’t be distracted or diverted but find what is right for you and makes you feel good about yourself. 

 

Assess what is really important to you. Determine the direction for your life, what you want to express or achieve and look for ways of doing that. Don’t be deterred by self-doubt and fear. It takes courage to go beyond your comfort zone but that is how you develop the strength to walk your own path. Consider some of the following questions:

  • What is currently going on in my life?
  • How do I want to go from here?
  • What do I need for moving forward differently?
  • What changes can I make? 
  • What do I need to leave behind?
  • What can I introduce into my life that will give me fulfilment, joy and a sense of direction?

Make reviews a regular part of your life. 

Personal empowerment includes living life with intention and self-responsibility. This is only possible if you know where you are at – good, bad or indifferent. Accepting your reality as it is at any given time – without being side-tracked by negative emotions or self-talk – will open the door to taking the initiative for subsequent actions.

 

Your audit could cover the whole of your life or just some current aspects. Try and be as honest and realistic as possible about yourself and your circumstances. Make sure that your feelings, hurts, disappointments or general discontent don’t interfere with viewing your life rationally. Even if you cannot do much about your external circumstances, you still have free will within them. Changing your attitude, approach or expectations may be sufficient if positive change is desired. 

Don’t wait for calamity to trigger your audit but tune into yourself from time to time for reviewing, contemplating and making sure you live your best life. 

 

How could a life audit be of benefit to you? If you have reviewed your situation, how did it work for you? What did you discover and learn? What were your difficulties? How did it affect your life? 

 

Originally posted on ThriveGlobal 6 December 2017