Sunday, March 31, 2019

Archaeology of the Interior Life




"Gaining access to that interior life is a kind of . . . archaeology: on the basis of some information and a little bit of guesswork, you journey to a site to see what remains and what's left behind and you reconstruct the world." - Toni Morrison 



What matters the most in your life?

Answers to that question alter as you grow and mature with experiences and in thinking about choices. During a lifetime, we return to aspects of life that matter the most.




Think of an incident that shaped the way you view your life?  Was a hidden gift there, or a lesson you've carried forward?  

Did you make a choice in the moment that benefitted your future?  Could you have gone a different direction and altered where you reside in life today?


Recall an incident where you felt a real or perceived disadvantage of life.  In reflection, would you change the results?

Consider a choice you did not make or one that was made for you because of procrastination or indecision. How would you rewrite it from a third person perspective?

Do you have unfinished business in an area of life?

How would you define the mosaics of your life?


Freewrite to one or all of the above concerns. Notice what writing uncovers in the archaeology of your interior life. Then, as Morrison suggests, "reconstruct the world."

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