The Life Line Exercise
How does the life line exercise help you understand your own story?
The life line exercise is a narrative reflection tool that asks you to map your life visually — high points, low points, and turning points — on a timeline. It surfaces the implicit story you have been telling yourself about your life, makes that story revisable, and identifies the experiences that most shaped your current values and patterns. Evidence is primarily clinical and observational; it is an established coaching and therapy tool with a solid mechanistic rationale.
The life line — sometimes called the lifeline exercise, the life history timeline, or life mapping — appears across psychotherapy, life coaching, leadership development, and narrative medicine. The core logic is that people are not simply responding to their present circumstances; they are living out a story they assembled from their past. Making that story visible lets you examine which parts are accurate, which are distorted, and which you might want to revise going forward.
Practices
- Draw the life line
- Identifying the turning points that shaped you
- Peak experience analysis
- Low-point reappraisal
- Narrative theme extraction
- Chapter titles — giving each life phase a name
- The future life line
Draw the life line
Draw a horizontal timeline and mark the key high points, low points, and turning points of your life.
Identifying the turning points that shaped you
Single out the three to five moments where your trajectory genuinely changed — and examine what you made of them.
Peak experience analysis
Study your life-line high points for the values and conditions they share — they reveal what fully alive looks like for you.
Low-point reappraisal
Return to the valleys on your life line and examine what they gave you — without minimizing what they cost.
Narrative theme extraction
Read your life line story as a whole and name the recurring theme — the sentence your life has been living out.
Chapter titles — giving each life phase a name
Divide your life line into phases and give each a chapter title that captures its essential quality.
The future life line
Extend your timeline forward and sketch the peaks and turning points you want to create — then work backward to today.
Practice this with IX Coach
Reading about a practice changes nothing on its own. IX Coach turns these into a guided, adaptive routine — discerning where you are in real time and walking the practice with you, session after session.
IX Coach: 7 days free, then $40/month (about $1.30/day).