Something brought you here. Maybe life feels off and you can’t explain why. Maybe you’re curious, or you want to try spiritual practices but don’t know where to start. Either way, you’re in the right place.
Your profile below maps four areas of what it means to be human: identity, relationships, reality, and purpose.
The more filled a segment, the more aligned that area of your life is. Even when everything looks aligned on paper though, life can still feel off. That’s worth paying attention to – it might mean your values themselves need a closer look.
We’ve selected an area for you to start with. Inside it you’ll find insights into how you’re wired, and simple spiritual practices, rooted in the way of Jesus, that you can try this week.
This doesn’t have to be a one-time snapshot. You’ll have the option to join a month-long journey for each practice. We recommend you revisit your profile to see how things change and develop.
Start with Reality
You draw meaning from a bigger story. You see your life as part of something larger than yourself. You have a sense of home: people, places or practices that ground you. You can be fully present where you are, while remaining open to new experiences. However, even though you know your body and your inner life are connected, you don't always act on it. Under pressure, it's easy to disconnect, pushing through tiredness, going through the motions. Your responses suggest some genuine alignment in this area, but also real tension – places where what you believe and how you actually live don't quite match. That gap isn't a failure; it's where growth tends to happen. The practice suggested here is designed to help you pay attention to the tension and begin to address it.
See how to grow in this areaYou genuinely believe every person has worth, not as an abstract principle, but you put it into practise with how you actually treat people. You have a sense of self-worth that doesn't rise and fall with other people's opinions. You welcome growth and feedback, not because your value depends on it, but because you want to grow. However, you can find it hard to hold your ground when people you respect see things differently as you're still developing your sense of how you know what's true. Your responses suggest some genuine alignment in this area, but also real tension – places where what you believe and how you actually live don't quite match. That gap isn't a failure; it's where growth tends to happen. The practice suggested here is designed to help you pay attention to the tension and begin to address it.
See how to grow in this areaYou value your freedom and exercise it, but you also understand that your choices affect others. You set limits on what others can demand of you, while holding your freedom in a way that leaves room for genuine care and love for others. You hold influence lightly. You're willing to lead when it matters and step back when it doesn't. You can trust others with decisions even when you think you might do it differently. However, you have glimpses of purpose but struggle to hold it consistently. Sometimes you act from a clear sense of direction; other times you find yourself just responding to whatever's in front of you. Your responses suggest some genuine alignment in this area, but also real tension – places where what you believe and how you actually live don't quite match. That gap isn't a failure; it's where growth tends to happen. The practice suggested here is designed to help you pay attention to the tension and begin to address it.
See how to grow in this areaYou can hold the complexity of injustice: that it lives in both individual choices and in systems and structures. You speak up when something is wrong, and you take your own accountability seriously. You have found a working balance between independence and genuine interdependence. You can ask for help and offer it freely. You value time alone without withdrawing from the people who matter to you. However, although you believe in hearing different views, some opinions test that commitment. You can find it hard to know when to speak and when to hold back and peace sometimes comes at the cost of honesty. Your responses suggest some genuine alignment in this area, but also real tension – places where what you believe and how you actually live don't quite match. That gap isn't a failure; it's where growth tends to happen. The practice suggested here is designed to help you pay attention to the tension and begin to address it.
See how to grow in this area