You might have an idea of your big Why, your drive or purpose.
What is the legacy you would like to leave? What is your contribution that you love to give, your strengths, values, and criteria? So, what is your purpose?
Next, write down your vision and mission statement: an intention of who you want to be and how you want to behave in different contexts in your life and the difference you want to make. You can also create a mood board with images that exemplify your purpose.
By the way, thinking and verbalization are not the only and not always the best ways to “know thyself”. Intuition, images, painting, movement, non-verbal postures, metaphors, meditation, stories, hypnosis, lucid dreaming, spatial exercises with role enactment – these are other approaches to answer these crucial questions: Who am I? And what is my Work?
Do you know your purpose and values?
My work is what I do for a living – says Otto Scharmer. My Work with a capital is my purpose. The Presencing Institute website shares some exercises with a combination of verbalization and imagination and intuition as described in Theory U.
When you know your purpose and values, you might feel more courageous to be the change you wish to see – or to ask that uncomfortable question or to speak truth to power – because you know your Why. Your Why is worth the discomfort or the risk when you deviate from the group norm or culture.
This is book post #38 – ME
Here‘s the earlier post
Here‘s the next post
If you’re confused – please start with post #1 or check the Positive Power overview and read the Positive Agent Manifesto.
Leaders, employees, consultants, citizens – everyone can make a positive difference from any position, without needing permission or resources from others. This blog will help you see positive possibilities and (re)claim your positive agency. Unstuck yourself and engage others via your interaction and actions. Transform into a positive organization where people and performance thrive.
I’m blogging my next book: “Positive Power at Work – How to make a positive difference from any position.” Your feedback is appreciated!