Last week we explored some of the symptoms of a developing
'midlife crisis,' and I suggested another way of viewing
such a crisis as a 'crisis of meaning.'
[See article:
Heading Towards a Midlife Crisis?]
So what can you do when you lose your sense of self and purpose?
What is the
road to recovering your true Self?
It starts by recognizing that you've been living a 'case of
mistaken identity.'
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You Aren't Who You've Thought You Were
============
The first step along the road to recovering your true Self
is to recognize that you're not who you've thought you
were.
It's like you've gone through all your life thinking
you were Bobbie Jones, the child of Mary and Bob Jones,
then you find out on your sixteenth birthday that your real
name is Dale Smith, and your parents are Cindy and Carl.
But, in truth, the case of mistaken identity you've been
living is even more dramatic than that.
The you you've come to know is made up of the 'molecules of
meaning' that you ascribed to things that happened to you
in your early, formative years during times when you felt
threatened or unsafe.

They may have been severely
traumatic, like the loss of a parent, or milder, like
someone repeatedly telling you that you'd never amount to
anything.
In the Life On Purpose Process we identify this as the
Inherited Purpose -- the fear and lack-based lie you've
been telling yourself about yourself and about life for so
long that you've come to believe it to be true.
In other
words, you've identified yourself as this lie and have gone
about enrolling others to relate to you in this way.
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Recognizing the Lie
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The good news -- it's not the truth -- it's a lie.
What
gives this lie so much power in shaping your life is that
you've thought it was the truth.
It's simply who you are,
or more accurately, it's who you've considered yourself to
be.
So it operates quietly in the background of your awareness
shaping your decisions, choices and actions.
But when you
begin to identify it for what it is, you pull it to the
foreground of your consciousness and can then choose
whether to allow it to shape your life or not.
(The
process of identifying your unique Inherited Purpose is
covered in depth starting on page 107 of the book, Life On
Purpose: Six Passages to an Inspired Life.)
As we begin to recognize the Inherited Purpose for the lie
it is, the natural question that arises next is, "If that's
not who I am, then who am I really?" And that begins the
next leg of this journey....which we will continue on next
week.
In the meantime remember that each person has their own
unique Inherited Purpose because we each had a unique set
of circumstances in our early childhood years, and we
unconsciously ascribed meaning to them.
While uncovering the Inherited Purpose can often feel like
trying to look at the back of your head without a mirror,
(try that now, but don't give yourself whiplash), here are
a few questions to get you started:
1. What are the earliest memories you had of a time or
times when you felt unsafe or threatened? (Example - I
remember when my father 'saved' me from a large snake when
I was 3-4 years old.)
2. What happened? (Example - I was sitting out in the
driveway 'building' an airplane out of sticks. I saw
another stick out of the corner of my eye, and went to pick
it up. Just as I was about to touch it, I looked over and
saw it was a large black snake that had slithered out of
the garden. I screamed bloody murder. My dad ran outside
and drove the snake away.
3. Think back to what meaning you ascribed to what
happened? (Example - My dad is superman and my hero, and
I'll never be as strong and brave as he is. Also, it's a
dangerous world out there.)

If you want to explore the Inherited Purpose in more depth,
check out these resources:
The book, Life On Purpose: Six Passages to an Inspired Life
available as an audiobook, quality paperback and hard cover
The Life On Purpose Home Study Course - Available as an
online 'virtual program' and a 'deliver-to-your-door
course'
- all available at
Life On Purpose.