Cheshbon ha-nefesh: accounting of the soul

Keep a daily honest accounting of how your targeted middah showed up — where you succeeded and where you failed.

Why it works

Cheshbon ha-nefesh (literally "accounting of the soul") was popularized by Rabbi Menachem Mendel Lefin in his 1808 guide of the same name. The practice is a behavioral monitoring diary applied to character: at day’s end, you review each instance when the targeted middah was activated, note what you did, and assess it honestly. The mechanism is consistent with research on behavioral self-monitoring: regular, specific feedback on a target behavior significantly increases the rate of improvement on that behavior.

How to do it

  1. Keep a small notebook dedicated to your current middah.
  2. Each evening, write down specific incidents where the middah was tested: what happened, how you responded, and what you would do differently.
  3. Keep the accounting factual and specific, not a general mood assessment.
  4. Review the accounting weekly for patterns — not for self-criticism but to identify the recurring triggers.

Evidence

Behavioral self-monitoring consistently improves targeted behavior across contexts in behavioral research — the "observer effect" in behavior change. Cheshbon ha-nefesh applies this mechanism to character traits with an additional ethical framing. (observational)

Self-monitoring’s behavioral effect is supported; the Mussar tradition adds a theological and ethical dimension not addressed by the behavioral literature.

Sources

  • Korotitsch & Nelson-Gray (1999), "An overview of self-monitoring research in assessment and treatment," Psychological Assessment — survey of self-monitoring effectiveness

Common mistake

Writing only failures in the accounting, which turns it into a shame journal rather than a learning record — Mussar explicitly requires noting successes alongside shortfalls, both as data and to prevent the practice from becoming punitive.

Practice this with IX Coach

IX Coach’s session tracking functions as a form of cheshbon ha-nefesh for your stated commitments — a specific, honest accounting of whether you followed through, without judgment but with accuracy.

Start with IX Coach

7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).