You Are The Actor Of Your Own Story

Many thinkers and writers, both past and present, have described human beings in this world as actors and actresses on a big stage - this life - to one great play. Ask yourself, what role are you playing? Who’s writing your script? Are you acting out your own story? Or are you simply going through the motions in someone elses' play?

We each have a set of ideas or beliefs about ourselves that define us as a central character in a “story” that we’re living out. All of the elements of the story have been passed down as part of our culture or upbringing, taught or ingrained, or simply fabricated in our own minds. We then go about enacting our stories as if they were true.


The thing is, most of us don’t even realize that we’re enacting a story, much less someone else’s story. Because of this, we’re completely at the mercy of the story and its writer, how it unfolds, how we react to certain events, and the eventual course our life takes.

If we don’t take the time to create our own story, we’ll continue enacting our current one, even if it isn’t working for us and even if someone else is holding the pen, or typing the keys.

So how can you discover the story you’re enacting and decide if it’s time to create your own spin-off? Here are some pointers:

1. Assume you are in fact enacting a story. Uncover the elements of your story. Be a detective, hunting for clues. Look at all your behaviors, your beliefs and describe them piece by piece, until the “whole” story emerges.

2. Assess your story. Are you happy with it? What would you change, remove, or add to this story to make it more satisfying? Re-write your story – become the author of the grandest story you can envision – a story that truly inspires.

3. Share your new story with important people in your life. Talk about your specific role in the story and why it appeals to you. The more you talk about your new story, the more it will become a part of you.

4. Commit to creating and living your new role. Make at least one change that is in alignment with the new story.

 
Finally, explore how your new story fits into the bigger story of your family, your friends, organization, corporation, country, and even the world. When you are satisfied with the results, look at what you have created and decide what contributions can your new individual story make to the bigger story? Because you may have to add s
omethings, and other things will fall away.

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