DMap Workbook 012015
DMap Workbook 012015
Desire
Map
A guide to creating
goals with soul
The
Workbook
The Desire Map WORKBOOK
Danielle LaPorte
FACEBOOK
www.daniellelaporte.com/facebook
TWITTER
@daniellelaporte
PINTEREST
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INSTAGRAM
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THE WORKBOOK
This is a companion tool for the main book, The Desire Map. The main book
contains both this workbook material and the deeper philosophy of desire
mapping. It’s the best place to start.
The reason we’ve created this stand-alone workbook is so that you can
have a functional, more compact place to desire map a few times a year.
Something more contained, lighter to handle and easy to cozy up with.
My wish is that you’ll give yourself the space and the honour of reflection,
liberating honesty, and dreaming. Go into your heart and bring forth your
desires. You’re on to something.
Real Love,
The Desire Map
at a Glance
Life areas
career. money. work. home. space. healing. fitness. food. rest artistic and self-expression.
style. possessions. fashion. travel. & relaxation. mental health. interests. education. hobbies.
gifts. sustainability. resources. sensuality. movement.
›› What three or four intentions and goals will I focus on this year?
Optimizing
Make it sacred
Let this process be important and sacred for you—because it is. You’re a
grown-up, so do this in whatever ways feel inspiring to you. You know how
you learn best and what you need to hear yourself think. Crank some rock
or rock opera if that’s what alters your state. Light a honey beeswax candle
(because those cheap petroleum-based candles are bad for your lungs). Find
a park bench, get a sitter, say a prayer. Do what you need to do to create a
container that will allow you to unfold your truth.
And if life is nuts right now for you, forget so-called sacred containers and
making Zen space. Do this on the subway, sneak it in between client meet-
ings, do it in the car while you’re waiting for the kids to get out of school. The
sacred shows up whenever and wherever you call on it.
Create space
You may be able to do the entire process in one sitting—a quiet afternoon
when your head is clear, a late night when you feel most alive. This is a very
elastic, personal process. It takes some people a few hours; it takes other
people two weeks. You may set out to do it all at once and wind up needing
a break, or it could go way faster than you imagine.
But the average time for most people to travel through The Desire Map is a
few days if they’re intent on it. You’ll likely want to pause between some of
Some people prefer to do this with a partner or a group. They find that the
interactivity of shared reflection and being seen and heard by another helps
make things clearer and more vibrant. For others, this is a solo expedition
and they wouldn’t have it any other way.
There are a thousand and one ways to slice life and, to some degree, any
division of it into categories is, admittedly, a bit forced. It’s all connected and
of a piece, really. However, these categories are meant to help you focus. But
if these themes overlap for you and you want to rename them so they better
suit your lifestyle and interests, please go right ahead. The boundaries are
fluid here.
We’re going to start with some yoga for your inner self, followed by some
gratitude and constructive critiquing, and then we’re heading full-tilt toward
your desires.
—Jiddu Krishnamurti
This is a warm-up. We’re circling your desires before we dive straight into them.
The Q&A on the following pages is meant to loosen some of the calcification
from your intellect and get you closer to your heart. We need to get you out
of your head—because that’s not where your truth springs from. Your mind
helps you act on your feelings. It’s your strategist and your activator. But your
core desired feelings come from the center of your heart.
Some of these questions may strike you as abstract or esoteric. They get
increasingly poetic as you go. You may not be familiar with a term, or you
may be suspicious about a question’s aims. That’s just fine. This is an open-
ended inquiry designed to get you to leap to your own conclusions and be
impulsive. I’m nudging you to think deeply and quickly.
You can go with the first answer that comes to mind, change your answers,
or jump all over the pages. You can give one-word answers or cram in as
many thoughts as you can fit into the space.
Light and heavy: This brings me alive, enlivens me, reminds me of who I am
Light and heavy: This depresses my spirit, weighs me down, down, down
The best advice I’ve received and didn’t follow—and I’m glad I ignored it
When in doubt
I value
I believe in
Ecstasy lives
Pleasure feels
The rhythm of it goes like this: I send out a honey-golden love: “I love you—
we’re in this together.” I make an energetic declaration. It’s pure and it’s inno-
cent and it’s graciously global.
Then I start calculating and surmising. “I get you. I see you.” And I can’t tell
if it’s intelligence or my heart starting to contract with fear, but somehow a
“Don’t fuck with me” vibe slips in there. And I end up at this: “You do your
thing and I’ll do mine.”
And thus, my relationship to Life: Big Love. True Smile. Tricky Lock. My work
is in progress.
I’m frightened
I’m proud of
In crisis
My favorite feeling
Make your gratitude lists as long as you want! Yep, the longer the better.
Next to each thing that you say that you’re grateful for, you’ll be asked to
complete this statement: “I’m grateful for this because . . . ” The reason
I’m asking you to qualify why you’re appreciative is because, again, it helps to
expand your awareness of gratitude and illuminate positive feelings—some
of which you may later discover are your core desired feelings. Again, this is
your process, so feel free to skip this layer if it starts to feel like a grind to you.
Next to each thing that you say isn’t working, you’ll be asked to complete
this statement: “Why this is causing me dissatisfaction . . .” Your answers
may surprise you.
That said, we don’t want to turn this into a bitch fest. So I suggest you keep
this part of the conversation brief. We really do want to make a practice of
accentuating the positive in our lives, so consider the “What’s not working”
sections just pit stops along your appreciation highway. Keep your time there
to a minimum, focus on the critical issues, and get back to the upside.
career. money. work. home. space. appreciation. value. cherish. love it.
style. possessions. fashion. travel. dig it. adore it. grateful. thankful.
gifts. sustainability. resources. pleased. brings me joy. delight.
comfort. pleasure. thrilled.
In terms of my LIVELIHOOD & LIFESTYLE, I’m grateful for this because . . . (How does this
I’m grateful . . . benefit your life or increase your happiness?)
In terms of my LIVELIHOOD & LIFESTYLE, I’m dissatisfied with this because . . . (How does
what’s not working . . . this have a negative effect on your life?)
healing. fitness. food. rest & relaxation. appreciation. value. cherish. love it.
mental health. sensuality. movement. dig it. adore it. grateful. thankful.
pleased. brings me joy. delight.
comfort. pleasure. thrilled.
In terms of my BODY & WELLNESS, I’m grateful for this because . . . (How does this
I’m grateful . . . benefit your life or increase your happiness?)
In terms of my BODY & WELLNESS, I’m dissatisfied with this because . . . (How does
what’s not working . . . this have a negative effect on your life?)
In terms of my CREATIVITY & LEARNING, I’m grateful for this because . . . (How does this
I’m grateful . . . benefit your life or increase your happiness?)
In terms of my CREATIVITY & LEARNING, I’m dissatisfied with this because . . . (How does
what’s not working . . . this have a negative effect on your life?)
In terms of my RELATIONSHIPS & SOCIETY, I’m grateful for this because . . . (How does this
I’m grateful . . . benefit your life or increase your happiness?)
In terms of my RELATIONSHIPS & SOCIETY, I’m dissatisfied with this because . . . (How does
what’s not working . . . this have a negative effect on your life?)
soul. inner self. truth. intuition. appreciation. value. cherish. love it.
faith. practices. dig it. adore it. grateful. thankful.
pleased. brings me joy. delight.
comfort. pleasure. thrilled.
In terms of who I am, within my ESSENCE & I’m grateful for this because . . . (How does this
SPIRITUALITY, I’m grateful . . . benefit your life or increase your happiness?)
In terms of who I am, within my ESSENCE & I’m dissatisfied with this because . . . (How does
SPIRITUALITY, what’s not working . . . this have a negative effect on your life?)
Here’s what you’re going to do: You’re going to riff on how you want to feel
in the key areas of your life, and then you’re going to narrow down those feel-
ings into some core desired feelings. Shazam. I’m making it all sound very
easy. And it can be. But this does require a focused heart and an open mind.
This could be really easy. You don’t need to tackle this material. Do yoga
with it. Let me plant the seed that this can be an incredibly fluid and energiz-
ing process if you just intend for it to be. You can make a wish right now, or
an out loud declaration: “I’m going deep with grace, and I’m coming out with
plenty of liberating illumination.”
This could make you sweat. Toil and fret if you need to. Get frustrated.
Grind out your anxieties. Rub words down to their nub. Most worthwhile
clarity involves some degree of friction.
You might cry—with relief, with a sense of sadness about being out of your
Soul zone, with the beauty of feeling into your heart more than ever. You might
I also think that a hot pot of herbal tea and some dark chocolate are essen-
tial—or whatever your cherished libations are. Silence—ahhh. Or music!
This exploration is about the vibration of words. You want to home in on the
feeling words that really resonate with you. They click. They inspire you. They
feel juuust right.
If you feel like you might have trouble accessing how you want to feel, then
you can warm up by thinking about how you don’t want to feel, and then aim
for the opposite of that with your desired feelings.
feelings.
emotions.
sensations.
states of being.
sensing.
mood.
awareness.
feelings.
emotions.
sensations.
states of being.
sensing.
mood.
awareness.
A desired feeling doesn’t have to be summed up in just one single word. For
example, “turned on” works. So does “at one with nature,” or, “passionately
engaged.”
Anything goes. Get abstract or specific. Do you want to feel spicy or red or
electric? Do you want to feel ten different ways of confident? Then just write
it down. Close your eyes and tune in. Let your wanted feelings flow freely. Do
not censor yourself. Go deep, yet keep it light.
Let it flow, but you don’t have to push yourself to come up with a huge
number of words for the sake of variety. If you have only a few words in each
section, then you might already be close to the heart of your matter.
Grow. Add new words if you want to. Do you see new feelings in the the-
saurus or definitions in the dictionary that you gravitate toward? Write those
down as well.
Again, there is no right way or wrong way to approach this. If you’re feeling
like you’re swimming in definitions, then back away from the dictionary and
go back to what feels easy. If you’re feeling like your words aren’t spiritual
enough or sophisticated enough by someone else’s standards, then give
yourself permission to keep it simple, because simplicity can be very freeing.
Trust yourself here. The truth wants to surface and you are creating space
for it to rise up.
Here are some different approaches and questions to help you explore
your relationship to various words:
Ask yourself which words make you feel positive, uplifted, expanded.
Which words feel like home? Which make you feel inspired, grounded,
peaceful, energized, or supported? Circle them.
And this abstract question might unlock some clarity for you:
Which words have the same or very similar meanings? To make your
binary choices, it can be helpful to look up the definitions of the words—or
just follow your heart. Either way, you can’t go astray.
Do you have strong emotions around some words? Some words might
make you want to laugh or cry. Pay extra close attention to the words that stir
your emotions—those feelings are trying to show you something.
Further on in the process, when she asked herself what the phrase “fully
realized” was really about, she had a eureka moment. “I was shocked to
discover that my desire to feel fully realized was basically about wanting to
prove something. My anxiety around that phrase was brought to clarity and I
was able to cross it off my list with confidence.”
It may be a process for you of grapple and examine, grapple and examine.
That’s great, because that will lead to clarity. If you’re confused about a word
or having a hang-up about it but still feel compelled to keep it on your list for
some reason, trust that the process will take you where you need to go with
that word and your relationship to it.
We need to zone in on the core desired feelings that you want. Ideally, you
want to choose three to five core desired feelings. We’re not going for a vast
array of emotions, rather, we want a compact foundation of feelings. Think of
it this way: we want the North, South, East, and West of your compass, not
every street that you could turn down.
Now you want to find the redundancies and overlaps between various words
so that you can knock some words off your list and zero in on the most
empowering selections for yourself.
I certainly want you to find terms that are not just inspiring, but comforting
and soothing. But let me point out something about the subtle but powerful
way in which words can orient our energy. They can steer us to look outward,
or they can anchor us in looking inward, so we’re either consciously looking
to our inner power or unconsciously looking to the outside world for what
we want.
Here’s my gentle point: Be really mindful about using terms for feeling states
that come from the outside world, as they can set you up to expect that Life
(or your partner or your job) is going to make you feel that way.
Here are some examples of feeling states that might depend on external
validation: respected, cherished, admired, honored, seen, heard, adored,
treasured, loved. These feeling words seem to rely on outside sources to
make you feel them.
On the other hand, here’s another subtle distinction that I want to bring up.
Some of us have a tendency to overgive. This tends to be more common for
women. We’re always in the mode of loving or nurturing, organizing, creating,
beautifying, motivating.
Loving as a verb is something you have to do. Yes, being loving is one of the
most delicious and nutritious ambitions a human can have. And for some
of us, “loving” as a core desired feeling would be the perfect fit. But if you
choose a doing word because you think you need to improve, or catch up, or
prove yourself, then you’re shortchanging yourself.
Remember: you know the answer. This is your domain, your spirit. And this
is deeply personal work. As Carl Jung put it, “Only the dreamer knows the
dream.” The meaning of each word or phrase is for you to own and interpret.
It does not have to fit a formula. It doesn’t have to be workable or realistic
for anyone else — not even your best friend or therapist. Dream your dream.
Feel your feelings. Aim.
If you want to keep more than five feelings, go right ahead. If seven is your
lucky number, then go ahead, choose seven words for luck. Focus might
help you get better results, but doing it in the way that works for you is what’s
most important.
One more note about the process: I’ll be asking you to write down
your core desired feelings in numerous sections of the workbook—
repeatedly. You’ll be writing them out many times. There’s a practi-
cal reason for this: to make the workbook your own reference. But
there’s also a psychological reason for it: the repetition of rewriting
your core desired feelings helps you to anchor them into your heart
and mind. This is a process of rooting and integration.
LET IT STEW
Don’t tattoo your core desired feelings anywhere —yet. Move on to the next
phase of desire mapping, but know that this can be a trial run. You can
feel out your words for a few weeks and go back and tweak them for the
exact fit. This is an art, not a science. Feelings are fluid and this practice
should be as well.
BE OPEN TO CHANGE
Will your core desired feelings change over time? Maybe. I worked with the
same feelings for a few years, then refined them more and really landed on
the right ones (I’ll tell you more about that in a few pages). I suspect some
people might want to choose new core feelings every year for the sake of
experimentation. On the other hand, what you nail down this week may serve
you for the rest of your life. The important thing is to stay curious and alive
with your core desired feelings. If they don’t keep their glow, you can’t use
them as a guidance system.
You’ve just done some good Soul-searching and surfacing. Before you
jump into the next phase of writing out your core desired feelings and
matching them up with visions and to-dos, it’s a good idea to let yourself
pause and integrate.
Be gentle with yourself. Your truth is rooting more deeply into your cells. Let
your ideas percolate and even infiltrate your thinking and the way you are
viewing yourself and your actions and your life.
Take a break—for an hour or two or for a couple of days. I’ll be here when
you get back.
And please, do come back. Don’t stay away for too long—we’re now in the
valley where ideas meet actions, and dreams are made manifest. The view is
stunning from here: miles of desires.
—Hildegard of Bingen
—Sigmund Freud
You’re going to go through each of the life areas (wellness, relationships, and
so on) and ask yourself what you want to have and experience in each area.
But you’re going to do it from a fresh mindset, in a new way—you’re going to
do it with your core desired feelings as the central goal.
The Desire Map | Using Your CDFs to Guide What You Want to Do, Have, and Experience | 53
Your desired feelings are dictating what you will set out to achieve.
We’re working from the inside out, which is the opposite of how we’ve been
trained to organize our lives. Typically we’d be aiming to “own a two-bedroom
house in the city,” with the unspoken (and often also unconscious) hope that
we might feel something along the lines of “vitality” and “connected” when we
got it. But that’s backward. So we’re going to ask ourselves what we need to
do, experience, and have in order to feel the way we most want to feel.
It might be tempting in this part of the process to slip back into default
goals—those things that we’ve been chasing somewhat mindlessly, out of
social expectation or habit. By virtue of asking yourself what it will really take
to feel the way you want, some of your long-held, external ambitions might fall
away, or some of them may become clearer and dearer to you than ever before.
It might start like this: I want to feel connected, vitality, deeply loving, and
prosperous within the Relationships and Society of my life, so I want to own
a two-bedroom house in the city.
But then you could realize that if you want to feel connected, vitality, deeply
loving, and prosperous within the Relationships and Society of your life, that
maybe you don’t actually need to own a two-bedroom house in the city. Just
because it’s a mainstream symbol of success, and your parents are expect-
ing you to become a responsible homeowner, and common financial advice
counsels that owning your residence is a sound investment doesn’t mean
it’s right for you. When you get honest with yourself, maybe owning a home
right now feels like a major burden to you. It doesn’t make you feel a sense of
vitality or prosperity at all. In fact, it makes you feel constricted and weighed
down. What a revelation. So you scratch that goal off your list and replace it
with something that is much more likely to help you feel connected, vitality,
deeply loving, and prosperous in your Relationships and Society:
“One month with Sam in Costa Rica by the end of next year. Unplugged.
Invite a bunch of friends to join us for the last week of the trip.”
Or, alternatively, your long-held dream might become clearer and dearer to
you than ever before. Owning a two-bedroom house in the city is much more
than just a material goal. You can see that it will allow you to feel more con-
nected to yourself (a place to root and create) and connected to a community,
54 | Using Your CDFs to Guide What You Want to Do, Have, and Experience | The Desire Map
which adds to your vitality in a big way. Creating a safe and beautiful home
for your growing family is another way for you to express your deep love, and
building your equity is definitely going to make you feel prosperous.
Indeed, this vision is right on track with your Soul. You decide to ramp up
your savings plan for a down payment and meet with a Realtor next week for
a chat about the neighborhood.
I want you to keep this question in your heart for all time:
That’s IT. That’s the heart of this next exploration and the raison d’être of
desire mapping.
The Desire Map | Using Your CDFs to Guide What You Want to Do, Have, and Experience | 55
LIVELIHOOD & LIFESTYLE
If I want to feel this way [write your core desired feelings here]
56 | Using Your CDFs to Guide What You Want to Do, Have, and Experience | The Desire Map
BODY & WELLNESS
If I want to feel this way [write your core desired feelings here]
The Desire Map | Using Your CDFs to Guide What You Want to Do, Have, and Experience | 57
CREATIVITY & LEARNING
If I want to feel this way [write your core desired feelings here]
58 | Using Your CDFs to Guide What You Want to Do, Have, and Experience | The Desire Map
RELATIONSHIPS & SOCIETY
If I want to feel this way [write your core desired feelings here]
The Desire Map | Using Your CDFs to Guide What You Want to Do, Have, and Experience | 59
ESSENCE & SPIRITUALITY
If I want to feel this way [write your core desired feelings here]
60 | Using Your CDFs to Guide What You Want to Do, Have, and Experience | The Desire Map
What do I need to do
to feel the way
I want to feel?
Brutal facts and fears about
getting what you want
My core desired feelings
What would the naysayers or your haughty inner critic say to stop you?
And what are the current tough circumstances, market conditions, or obstacles standing
between you and what you want in every area of your life?
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Let ’em tumble out however they come to you. Detox time.
The Desire Map | Using Your CDFs to Guide What You Want to Do, Have, and Experience | 63
Positive and inspiring thought forms
that will eclipse fear and rev you up
My core desired feelings
Now’s the time to record helpful thought forms that can quell all the negative stuff you wrote
out on the previous pages. Choose optimism. Think thoughts that feel good. Cheerlead yourself.
Who are the people who adore and support you the most?
Who are the role models and mavericks who’ve proven that it can be done?
64 | Using Your CDFs to Guide What You Want to Do, Have, and Experience | The Desire Map
Riff out a list of high-energy, uplifting words. You can make bright, determined, feisty, resounding declarations.
The Desire Map | Using Your CDFs to Guide What You Want to Do, Have, and Experience | 65
Bonus! You got what
you want. Already.
Clarity of desire, wants, feelings, havings, doings . . . you’re getting the hang
of it. Before we move into action mode, here’s a beautiful notion to consider:
You have a lot of what you want already—in places you may have over-
looked, in different packaging than you expect, and hidden in plain sight.
And when you can appreciate the indirect and subtle ways in which Life is
already delivering on your dreams, then you’ll create more direct and obvious
pleasures in your life, just the way you’ve been imagining them.
Now, with each desire, think about where you already have that quality, feel-
ing, or experience in your life—you might have to dig deep to find it. That’s
okay. You’ll find it somewhere. Even if it’s just a speck or a subtle sensation.
I want: I want to laugh more with my man. Currently, you’re not laughing
much with your man, which is why you’re craving it, of course. But! Someone
in your life must be filling your funny cup.
I already have: Sally makes me laugh my ass off at least twice a week. Jack at
work is good for a giggle every day. (Action note to self: Call Sally more. Thank
her for making me laugh. Hang out with Jack at the water cooler.) Focus on
the laughter that you do have in your life.
Super duper appreciate what you’ve got that makes you feel good. Resist
the temptation to compare it to what you’re lacking. Just keep appreciat-
ing, appreciating, appreciating what’s working, where it’s working.
The Desire Map | Bonus! You Got What You Want. Already. | 67
This practice is not only soothing, but it can also help you to fundamentally
lighten the eff up.
I already have: I got money back from income taxes! I get a paid holiday next
week. Now that I work at home on Fridays, I save 100 bucks a month on train
fare and lunch out. (Affirmative note to self: My money/energy flow is increas-
ing.) You just found about 500 additional bucks in your life. More is sure to
come, very possibly from sources you haven’t even accounted for yet.
I want: I want to spend more time in nature. I’m stuck in a cubicle, in a big city,
and I’m going bonkers. Plus I can’t get out of town right now.
I already have: Well, I’m bringing flowers in to work this week. Sleeping with
the bedroom windows open. I’m sitting on my balcony to say prayers every
night before bed. I’m framing those photos from my holiday in the Sierras.
(Action note to self: Book that hiking trip in Maine NOW. No excuses.)
Small things can be big acts of self-love that will boost you and help you
make the bigger choices required to really go after your desires—like moving
out of the city, apropos of the above example.
I already have: My journal, my dog, and my deaf grandma are all great listen-
ers. I can tell them anything and everything about my dreams and they don’t
judge me. (Affirmative note to self: Even if I don’t have a best friend who gets
me, Life hears my dreams. Every single one.)
Sometimes you really need to reach to find what’s working in the realm of
your desire. And the practice of identifying some positives might feel like
you’re collecting crumbs. Do it anyway. It will start to rinse away any lurking
victim mentality or despair. Start somewhere.
Here’s what happens when you find evidence of fulfillment and pleasure
in your current reality (even if it’s a stretch to do so):
›› You take the neediness vibe out of your wants, and when you’re less
desperate, you will think more clearly and act more calmly.
68 | Bonus! You Got What You Want. Already. | The Desire Map
›› You might realize that you—and some of the people you love—are
further along than you’ve been giving yourself—or them—credit for.
The Desire Map | Bonus! You Got What You Want. Already. | 69
Helpful people and resources
How did the rose ever open its heart and give to this world all of its beauty?
It felt the encouragement of light against its being; otherwise we all remain too frightened.
—Hafiz
People who are local, near to me, who I know directly and personally
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Professionals, experts, service providers
The Desire Map | Bonus! You Got What You Want. Already. | 71
How will you give of yourself?
To get what he wanted, a man had to give other people what they wanted.
You should be basking in the abundance of who you are by now. You have so much to give.
Where would you like to give your love and talent? Where can you pour out your talent and expertise in a
way that will light you right up?
You don’t have to commit to giving in all these ways or to all of the outlets you can give to. You can turn
some of this into an intention or goal later in this process. For now, just free-flow about what’s possible—it
generally feels quite regenerative to look at where and how you can give.
72 | Bonus! You Got What You Want. Already. | The Desire Map
Desire, meet action
Planning is essential. Plans are useless.
—Winston Churchill
—Marcus Buckingham
This is where you sift through everything that you said you want to do,
experience, and have in your life—and you choose the most important of
those intentions and goals to go after.
Set out to do three or four things this year with gusto and excellence,
rather than doing a dozen things just sufficiently. Trust me on this.
Choosing
The most powerful question to ask yourself when you consider which
intentions or goals to focus on:
Your selections should not hinge solely on the following questions, but these
questions will help you get clearer on what excites you the most.
I chose and my world was shaken. So what? The choice may have
been mistaken; the choosing was not.
—Stephen Sondheim
Just do something. Motion is better than stasis. When you take action, you
learn, you build skills, you get freer. When you stay still because you’re afraid
to make a move, your self-worth wanes, your doubts fester and breed more
doubts, your courage atrophies. It’s not pretty. Suit up and head out.
You’re putting your core desired feelings at the center of your life. Yes, yes, you are. You know how you want to
feel. And you’ve got a really good idea of what you can do, have, and experience—and think and believe—to
help yourself feel that way.
Now you’re going to take aim and devote yourself to actualizing what you want the most.
Go through each of the life areas (LIVELIHOOD, SPIRITUALITY, and so on) and REVIEW what you said
you want to do, experience, and have in that area in order to feel your core desired feelings.
Out of all these things, which are the most exciting to you? Which of them makes you feel the way you
want to feel? Now home in on three or four of the most potent feel-good opportunities that you would
like to actualize this year.
I suggest you do a MONTHLY CHECK-IN and a WEEKLY action list. I’ve cre-
ated formatted sheets you can write on directly within this workbook or refer
to while writing your answers on a separate sheet of paper. (You can also
print these out from The Desire Map website in a variety of sizes.)
Decide what you need to do each month to move closer to your three or
four intentions or goals for the year. I prefer to do this just one month at a
time, rather than filling in objectives for twelve months at once.
For many of us, core desired feelings are an entirely new way of steering
our lives and setting goals. You’ll have to keep reminding yourself: your
primary intention is to feel good, and all of your external objectives exist in
order to help you feel your core desired feelings.
So when you sit down for this monthly check-in, you’re going to look at your
desired feelings as the driver.
Keep this important question in mind every week and month when you
ink out your to-dos:
How can I reach my long-term vision in ways that feel [insert your desired
feelings here]? What you’re feeling along your journey is what creates the
result.
This question will help you adjust your actions and behaviors in order to get
to your goal. You evaluate, affirm, or adjust your to-dos and your intentions
according to what you think will generate your desired feelings.
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Plan your week or month by your core desired feelings. “What do I need to
do this week to generate my core desired feelings?” or, “What can I do this
month to feel . . . ”
I like to keep this really simple. I write out three to five actions each week
that are on track with both my desired feelings and my goals (goals which
are sourced from my desired feelings to begin with). I like to scope out
the coming week on Fridays, because weekends are good for my mental
health, and planning for the week on a Monday is the surest way to get
behind the eight ball. (Never, ever plan your week out on a Monday.)
Use your own calendar system. Or get yourself a Desire Map Day Planner
from DanielleLaPorte.com. It’s a whole-life approach—a calendar that
includes your heart and your day-to-day. Dreams + practicalities. Of course.
However you organize your days and months, put your core desired
feelings and goals on the altar of your life and say, “THIS. THIS is what I
am living in to!”