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🌅 India Rising
Years ago, I was feeling a bit uninspired and unmotivated. My daily routine felt mundane, and I wasn’t sure what really mattered to me or what direction I wanted my life to take.
I spent years reading self-help books in search of greater meaning in my life as well as inspiration.
These days, I realize that all the reading in the world won’t help you if you never take action. They speak louder than words.
But many times, those actions can be inspired by reading and thinking about things. Learning and having a plan.
Here in the new year, I am in the midst of divesting myself of possessions, culling my hoard if you will. That includes books, which, truthfully, have been somewhat of a weakness rather than my superpower.
Before I move a few books along, I intend to share some of what I learned with others. Many of these lessons are too valuable to be dumped at a resale shop, donated to my local library, or placed in a Little Free Library.
So when I recently reread some of my bookmarked excerpts from Intentional Living: Choosing a Life That Matters by leadership expert John Maxwell, I was pleasantly surprised by how much I still related to and got out of it.
Your Core Values
One of the big takeaways I got from the book is that living intentionally means being deliberate about your choices and aligned with your core values and purpose.
So often we get caught up in just going through the motions each day without really thinking about what’s most important to us or how we want to spend our limited time on this earth.
Maxwell stresses that living intentionally requires us to set goals, prioritize what really lights us up, and cut out distractions and time-wasters that pull us away from what truly fulfills us.
I found the exercise he includes helpful for focusing on my values and envisioning what I want my life to look like in five to ten years.
JaiHind.. 🇮🇳 JaiBharat..
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