Leaving Secrets: How to Create a Personal Instruction Manual for Your Life
Imagine if your great, great grandfather or grandmother had left you a book with her secrets for living. Maybe it contained nuggets of wisdom, yummy receipes, favorite jokes, or just insights for how to lead a good life.
Ever since people learned of my next book, Life’s Missing Instruction Manual, people are curious how to create their own “manual” for life.
You can leave such a book for your own family. What are the key lessons you’ve learned in your life? Are you ready to share them with your children and grandchildren – or with your friend, siblings, parents, and grandparents?
What you’ve gleaned from your life experiences can make things easier for your children or your relatives. In fact, the lessons you’ve earned from trail and error can be the perfect gift for everyone in your life – or for one person who matters to you. Here’s how to commit your insights to writing and share them with your fellow life travelers.
· Carry a pad of paper around with you everywhere for a week.
· Jot down your thoughts and observations as they occur to you. Don’t judge them. Just make note of them.
· Add personal stories and memories, as they come to mind. Again, don’t edit your thoughts. Just commit them to paper.
· Take a few days to go through your notes, and underline the most important passages, and make additional comments in the margins.
· From this, distill the lessons you most want to share with others: your perspective, your values, what matters most to you, and your reactions to the world around you.
· Find a beautiful journal or blank book – one that you feel a strong connection with. You might find it at a bookstore, an antique store, an online auction site, a craft store, or even a flea market. Where you find it doesn’t matter. How you feel about it does.
· Fill the journal with your own instruction manual for life. Make sure to include a title and your name.
· Find a special person to share it with, and turn the presentation of the journal into a celebration.
If you don’t feel comfortable writing your notes and stories, you can dictate them into a portable tape recorder, and later, you can transcribe them into a journal. You don’t have to be a bestselling author, academic, or philosopher to create a instruction manual that can helped your loved ones every day of their lives . . . and be passed on to future generations as well.
joe
www.mrfire.com