How can You Live Your Life More Intentionally?
The Short Answer: Living intentionally means making conscious choices aligned with your values, regularly pausing to assess what truly matters, and having the courage to say no to what doesn’t serve your authentic self, even when it’s uncomfortable.
The Art of Living Intentionally
Picture this: You’re 85 years old, sitting in your favourite chair with a cup of tea growing cold in your hands. As you look back on your life, what do you see? A series of incidents that happened to you, or a collection of moments you deliberately chose?
Living intentionally isn’t about having every minute planned or becoming some zen master who never loses their keys (though that would be nice). It’s about becoming the author of your own story rather than a passive character watching life unfold. It’s the difference between drifting down a river and choosing your direction—sometimes going with the current, sometimes paddling upstream, but always making conscious choices about where you want to go.
Most of us stumble through life on autopilot, reacting to whatever comes our way. We say yes to commitments that drain us, spend time on activities that don’t fulfil us, and wonder why we feel so disconnected from our own lives. But what if there was another way?
Amanda’s Awakening
Amanda Lewis had always been the woman who had it all figured out. At 60, she was the epitome of success—a wardrobe full of designer suits, a wine collection that seriously impressed dinner guests, and a calendar so packed it required colour-coding. Her morning routine was a masterpiece of efficiency: espresso machine humming at 5:47 AM sharp, the bitter richness coating her tongue as she scrolled through emails that had accumulated overnight like digital snow.
But on this particular Tuesday morning in October, something was different.
The familiar ping of her phone felt like nails on a chalkboard. The fluorescent office lights seemed to buzz louder than usual, casting everything in a harsh, unforgiving glare. Even her favourite silk blouse felt scratchy against her skin, as if her body was rejecting the very uniform of her success.
“I can’t do this anymore,” she whispered to her reflection in the bathroom mirror during her lunch break. The words surprised her—they seemed to come from somewhere deep inside, a place she’d been ignoring for years.
That evening, Amanda found herself in her kitchen, not preparing her usual efficient dinner-for-one, but standing perfectly still, listening. The hum of the refrigerator. The distant sound of her neighbour’s TV through the walls. The rhythm of her own breathing. When was the last time she’d actually listened to anything?
She opened her laptop and began typing—not a work email or quarterly report, but a letter to herself:
“Dear Amanda, when did you stop dreaming? When did you trade your soul for a salary? When did you become so busy living someone else’s idea of success that you forgot to ask what success meant to you?”
The questions poured out, each one hitting like a small earthquake. She wrote about the art classes she’d abandoned for MBA courses, the travel dreams shelved for career advancement, the relationships sacrificed on the altar of ambition. The taste of tears mixed with the lingering coffee on her lips as she realised she’d been living someone else’s life for decades.
That night, Amanda couldn’t sleep. She lay in her perfectly appointed bedroom, staring at the ceiling, feeling the weight of her Egyptian cotton sheets like a shroud. At 3 AM, she got up and did something she hadn’t done in twenty years—she went outside and looked at the stars. The cool October air raised goosebumps on her arms, and for the first time in months, she felt fully alive.
The next morning brought an unusual sight: Amanda’s resignation letter. Not a dramatic storming out or a bridge-burning manifesto, but a thoughtful, intentional choice. She’d spent the pre-dawn hours researching art therapy programs, travel opportunities for mature students, and volunteer positions that aligned with her forgotten values.
“You’re having a midlife crisis,” her sister proclaimed over lunch the following week. The restaurant was their usual spot—white tablecloths, overpriced salads, conversations that skimmed the surface like stones on water.
“No,” Amanda replied, surprising herself with the firmness in her voice. “I’m having a midlife awakening. There’s a difference.”
She pulled out a small notebook—not her usual leather-bound planner, but a simple journal with a soft, worn cover. “I’ve been asking myself different questions. Not ‘What should I do?’ but ‘What do I want to create?’ Not ‘What will people think?’ but ‘What would make me come alive?'”
The transformation wasn’t instant or Instagram-ready. There were moments of doubt, nights when the financial anxiety kept her awake, days when the old patterns tried to reassert themselves like muscle memory. But Amanda had tasted something she’d forgotten existed: the sweet satisfaction of alignment between her choices and her values.
Six months later, she was teaching art to children in a community centre that smelled of tempera paint and possibility. Her hands, once manicured for boardroom presentations, were now stained with colours that wouldn’t wash out completely—and she loved it. The sound of children’s laughter had replaced the aggressive buzz of conference calls. Instead of the metallic taste of stress, she savoured the simple pleasure of shared creativity.
“I thought I was successful before,” Amanda told me during one of our coaching sessions, her eyes bright with the kind of energy that comes from living authentically. “But I was just busy. I was productive, but not purposeful. I was achieving, but not thriving.”
She paused, looking out the window where late afternoon sunlight painted everything golden. “The funny thing is, I make less money now, but I feel richer than I ever have. I sleep better, laugh more, and for the first time in decades, I’m excited about tomorrow.”
Amanda’s story isn’t unique—it’s happening all around us, in quiet moments of courage when people choose intentionality over inevitability. It’s the sound of someone saying no to a good opportunity because it’s not the right opportunity. It’s the sight of a packed schedule with white space deliberately preserved for what matters most. It’s the taste of a meal eaten slowly, without distractions, in the company of people who truly see and hear you.
Five Key Takeaways for Living Intentionally
1. Clarity Comes Before Change
You can’t live intentionally if you don’t know what you’re aiming for. Amanda’s transformation began with honest self-reflection, not action. Before making any major changes, invest time in understanding your core values, natural strengths, and what genuinely brings you joy, not what you think should bring you joy.
2. Small Choices Create Big Shifts
Intentional living isn’t about dramatic life overhauls (though sometimes those happen). It’s about making conscious choices in small moments: choosing to put your phone away during dinner, deciding to say no to commitments that don’t align with your values, or pausing before reacting to ask, “What response would my best self choose?”
3. Discomfort Is the Price of Authenticity
Living intentionally often means disappointing people, facing uncertainty, and choosing harder paths because they’re more meaningful. Amanda had to sit with financial anxiety and social judgment. The discomfort is temporary, but the regret of not living authentically lasts forever.
4. Your Energy Is Your Most Precious Resource
Pay attention to what gives you energy and what drains it. Intentional living means becoming a fierce guardian of your energy, investing it in people, activities, and pursuits that align with your values and contribute to your growth.
5. Progress, Not Perfection
There’s no such thing as perfectly intentional living. You’ll make choices you regret, get pulled back into old patterns, and have days when you feel completely off track. The key is to notice, course-correct, and keep choosing consciousness over autopilot.
Narrative Journaling Prompt: The Raw Life Review Exercise
Imagine you’re 90 years old, sitting in your favourite spot, looking back on your life. Write a letter from your future self to your current self, addressing these questions:
- What choices are you most proud of?
- What risks are you grateful you took?
- What would you change if you could?
- What advice would you give about living more intentionally?
Write for at least 15 minutes without stopping. Don’t worry about grammar or making sense—let your future wisdom flow onto the page. This exercise often reveals insights that your logical mind might miss.
Additional Exercises for Intentional Living
The Energy Audit: For one week, track your energy levels after different activities, interactions, and commitments. Rate each on a scale of 1-10 (1 = draining, 10 = energising). Use this data to make more intentional choices about how you spend your time.
The Values Clarification: List your top five values (examples: creativity, family, adventure, service, learning). For each major decision over the next month, ask: “Which of my values does this choice support or compromise?” Choose accordingly.
The Monday Morning Test: Before committing to anything new, ask yourself: “If I had to do this every Monday morning for the next year, would I be excited or dreadful?” Your immediate gut reaction is usually the right answer.
“The privilege of a lifetime is being who you are.” – Joseph Campbell
Ready to Start Living Intentionally?
If Amanda’s story resonates with you, if you’re feeling that familiar tug of “there has to be more than this,” you might be ready for a radical reset. Sometimes we need a structured approach to uncover what intentional living looks like for our unique situation.
That’s why I’ve created the “Ready for a Radical Reset?” quiz—a thoughtful assessment that helps you identify where you are on your intentional living journey and what specific areas need your attention. It’s not about judgment or comparison; it’s about clarity and direction.
The quiz explores your relationship with time, energy, values, and choices, offering personalised insights and practical next steps. Because here’s the truth: we all know we want to live more intentionally, but knowing where to start can feel overwhelming.
Take the quiz when you’re ready to move from wanting change to creating it.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Is intentional living just another way of saying “self-care”? A: While self-care is important, intentional living goes much deeper. Self-care is about maintaining your well-being; intentional living is about aligning your entire life with your authentic values and purpose. It’s the difference between taking a bubble bath and restructuring your life around what truly matters to you.
Q: What if I don’t know what my values are or what I want? A: That’s completely normal and actually a great starting point. Begin by noticing what you don’t want—what drains your energy, what feels misaligned, what makes you feel resentful. Often, understanding what we’re moving away from helps clarify what we’re moving toward. The exercises in this article are designed to help with this discovery process.
Q: How do I live intentionally when I have responsibilities like kids, a mortgage, and a demanding job? A: Intentional living isn’t about abandoning responsibilities; it’s about approaching them consciously. You might not be able to quit your job tomorrow, but you can choose how you show up to it. You can’t eliminate all obligations, but you can examine which ones truly serve your family’s well-being and which are just habit or social pressure.
Q: Isn’t this just privileged advice for people who have choices? A: While it’s true that some people have more external constraints than others, everyone has some degree of choice in how they respond to their circumstances. Intentional living isn’t about having unlimited options; it’s about making conscious choices within whatever constraints exist. Sometimes the most intentional thing is choosing your attitude, your focus, or how you spend your free 15 minutes.
Q: How long does it take to start living intentionally? A: The beauty is that you can start right now with your very next choice. However, rewiring ingrained patterns and creating sustainable change typically takes months or years. Be patient with yourself—this is a lifelong practice, not a destination you arrive at and then you’re done.
Further Reading
If Amanda’s story has sparked something in you and you’re hungry for more wisdom on living intentionally, here are some transformative books that can guide you deeper into this practice:
“Essentialism: The Disciplined Pursuit of Less” by Greg McKeown This isn’t just about decluttering your closet—it’s about decluttering your entire life. McKeown shows you how to identify what’s truly essential and eliminate everything else. Perfect for recovering people-pleasers who struggle with saying no.
“The Power of Now” by Eckhart Tolle While some find Tolle’s spiritual approach challenging, his core message about presence is fundamental to intentional living. You can’t make conscious choices if you’re always mentally living in the past or future.
“Atomic Habits” by James Clear Intentional living happens in the small moments, and Clear’s book is masterful at showing how tiny changes compound into life transformation. Essential reading for anyone who wants to bridge the gap between intention and action.
“The Gifts of Imperfection” by Brené Brown Brown’s research on vulnerability and authenticity provides the emotional foundation for intentional living. You can’t align with your values if you don’t have the courage to be seen as you truly are.
“Digital Minimalism” by Cal Newport In our hyperconnected world, intentional living requires being deliberate about technology use. Newport offers practical strategies for reclaiming your attention and time from digital distractions.
“Mindset” by Carol Dweck Intentional living requires believing that change is possible. Dweck’s research on growth mindset provides the psychological foundation for transforming your life at any age.
“The Untethered Soul” by Michael A. Singer For those ready to go deeper into the spiritual aspects of conscious living, Singer explores what it means to live from your authentic self rather than your conditioned patterns.
The Bottom Line
Living intentionally isn’t about perfection or having all the answers. It’s about becoming conscious of your choices and aligning them with what truly matters to you. It’s about waking up from the autopilot of daily life and taking the steering wheel of your own experience.
Amanda’s story reminds us that it’s never too late to choose authenticity over expectation, purpose over productivity, and consciousness over convenience. The cost of intentional living is discomfort, uncertainty, and sometimes disappointment from others. The cost of not living intentionally is much higher—it’s the slow erosion of your authentic self.
Remember the short answer we started with: Living intentionally means making conscious choices aligned with your values, regularly pausing to assess what truly matters, and having the courage to say no to what doesn’t serve your authentic self, even when it’s uncomfortable.
Your life is not a dress rehearsal. Every moment is an opportunity to choose intentionality over inevitability. The question isn’t whether you have time to live intentionally—it’s whether you can afford not to.