Toy Story Lets Its Characters Grow Up


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Five practical steps to find your purpose, manage your time, and build the life you actually want.
Think big and act small. In a nutshell, that’s the key to building a life with real purpose.
Grace Lordan’s book Think Big1 uses behavioral science to show how tiny, consistent actions shape your future self. Her insights align with Jewish wisdom about discovering your mission and becoming the person you’re meant to be.
Here are five practical steps to get you started.
This isn’t abstract. It’s the picture you hold when you imagine your future self, the direction that pulls you forward. It shows up in the details of your life: what you enjoy, what energizes you, and what you’re naturally good at.
According to Rabbi Akiva Tatz, if you want to understand what you are meant to be doing in this world, look closely at your natural qualities and talents.2 Judaism teaches that each person is given a chelek, a portion of the world that is uniquely theirs. Your strengths are often the first clues. They point toward your life’s work – and your task is to use them to their fullest.
But natural talent isn’t enough. Growth requires deliberate practice. Think Big recommends setting aside at least 90 minutes each week for focused work that moves you closer to your goal. Write down:
Small steps, done consistently, create momentum.
Time is your most precious resource and the easiest to lose without noticing. The first step is to identify your time‑sinkers: de‑energizing activities that drain your attention and add little value. Ask yourself:
Then shift your focus to what energizes you. Your life mission often reveals itself in the activities that make you feel most alive. Consider:
Where your energy goes, your purpose often follows.
We all carry biases that quietly limit us. You might hesitate because you worry about what others will think: the saving‑face effect. Or you might choose a predictable path simply because the outcome feels certain: the ambiguity effect.
To move past these barriers, look at what life keeps asking of you:
Judaism teaches that these recurring patterns aren’t random. They often hint toward the work you’re meant to do.
Behavioral science is clear: context matters. We are shaped by the people around us and the cues in our environment, many of which we process without noticing.
One of the strongest environmental influences is psychological safety – whether the space you are in allows you to speak honestly without fear of humiliation. We grow in environments that allow authenticity and shrink in those that don’t.
To understand how your environment is shaping you, ask yourself:
Your purpose doesn’t emerge in isolation. It grows through context, community, and the places where you choose to put yourself.
Resilience isn’t about “bouncing back.” It’s about growing and learning through life’s challenges. You build it through your beliefs, your relationships, and your engagement with the world.3
Think about a time you faced something truly difficult. Consider:
Judaism teaches that hardships aren’t detours. They’re often where your mission takes shape. The things you struggle with most are the ones you’re meant to refine.
Think big about who you’re becoming and act small in how you get there. Each step you take is a step closer to the person you’re meant to be. Over time, those small steps don’t just move you forward. They reveal the path that was yours all along.
