9 Practical Ways To Start Living Your Best Life Now

Discover practical strategies to align your money, mindset, health, and habits so you can start living your best life with intention.

By Sneha Tete, Integrated MA, Certified Relationship Coach
Created on

9 Practical Tips For Living Your Best Life Now

Living your best life is not about perfection, overnight success, or having everything figured out. It is about making intentional choices every day so that your time, energy, money, and relationships reflect what truly matters to you. With a clear purpose, healthy habits, and a solid financial foundation, you can create a life that feels fulfilling instead of simply busy.

This guide walks you through nine practical tips that mirror the key themes from the original Clever Girl Finance article: from finding your purpose and prioritizing health to getting your finances in order and practicing gratitude regularly.

1. Find Your Purpose

Your purpose is the bigger “why” behind the way you live, work, and use your money. It doesn’t have to be grand or public; it simply has to be meaningful to you. Having a sense of purpose is associated with better psychological well-being and even improved health outcomes over time.

Reflect on what matters most

To clarify your purpose, start by reflecting honestly on what energizes you and what feels draining. Ask yourself questions like:

  • What would I pursue if money and other people’s opinions were not limiting me?
  • Which activities make me lose track of time in a good way?
  • What problems or causes do I feel deeply about in my community or the world?
  • When do I feel most like myself—at work, at home, with friends, or when learning?

Write down your answers and look for patterns. You may notice themes such as creativity, service, teaching, freedom, or stability.

Align your goals with your purpose

Once you recognize your purpose themes, shape your goals around them so that your actions feel connected rather than random. For example:

  • If helping others is core to your purpose, you might explore careers or volunteering in education, health, or community work.
  • If freedom and flexibility are central, you might prioritize building savings, paying off debt, and eventually working remotely or starting a business.

Purpose does not have to be permanent. It can evolve as you gain experience and move through different stages of life.

2. Aim For Growth

Living your best life requires a mindset of growth rather than comfort. Growth can be uncomfortable, but it is where new opportunities, skills, and confidence are built. Personal growth is also closely tied to resilience—the ability to recover from setbacks and adapt to change.

Step outside your comfort zone

Staying where everything feels familiar may feel safe, but it can also keep you stuck. Consider small, realistic ways to challenge yourself:

  • Apply for that promotion or raise you have been delaying.
  • Start the side hustle you have been researching but postponing.
  • Experiment with investing only after you have built an emergency fund and understand the basics of risk and diversification.
  • Work on a creative project—writing, art, or content creation—that you have always wanted to try.

Use goals and tracking to stay motivated

Turn growth into a concrete plan:

  • Set specific goals (e.g., “Read 12 books this year,” “Save $3,000,” “Walk 8,000 steps per day”).
  • Break big goals into smaller monthly or weekly milestones.
  • Track progress in a planner, app, or spreadsheet so you can see improvement, not just effort.

Growth is rarely linear, so expect plateaus and setbacks. The aim is consistency, not perfection.

3. Prioritize Health

Your health is the foundation for everything else: your work, relationships, financial goals, and enjoyment of life. Poor health can bring emotional stress and significant financial costs through healthcare spending and lost income. Thinking of health as a long-term investment helps you treat it as a priority, not an afterthought.

Physical health

Support your body so you can show up fully for your life and goals. Focus on simple, sustainable habits:

  • Move regularly: Choose activities you enjoy—walking, yoga, strength training, dancing—and aim for at least 150 minutes of moderate-intensity movement per week as many health guidelines recommend.
  • Eat nourishing foods: Build meals primarily around vegetables, fruits, whole grains, and quality protein while limiting highly processed foods and added sugars.
  • Sleep well: Prioritize 7–9 hours of sleep per night, create a wind-down routine, and limit screens right before bed.
  • Stay on top of checkups: Don’t ignore persistent symptoms, and schedule regular preventive care if accessible to you.

Mental and emotional health

Living your best life also means maintaining emotional balance and resilience. Consider:

  • Practicing stress-management tools like deep breathing, journaling, or short breaks.
  • Building supportive relationships where you can speak honestly and ask for help.
  • Seeking professional support such as therapy or counseling if you are dealing with anxiety, depression, or overwhelming stress.

4. Take Action

Dreams and intention are powerful, but action is what brings them to life. Many people feel stuck not because they lack ideas, but because they are afraid to start or overwhelmed by the size of the goal. Turning big dreams into small, regular actions makes change achievable.

Turn ideas into simple next steps

Instead of focusing on the entire journey, focus on the very next step. For example:

  • Instead of “Get out of debt,” the next step might be “List all debts with balances and interest rates in a spreadsheet.”
  • Instead of “Get healthier,” the next step might be “Take a 10-minute walk after lunch today.”
  • Instead of “Change careers,” the next step might be “Research three roles and what skills they require.”

Use habits and routines

Action becomes much easier when it turns into habit. Consider:

  • Scheduling time in your calendar for key actions (e.g., money check-in every Sunday, workout three mornings a week).
  • Pairing a new habit with an existing one, such as listening to educational podcasts during your commute.
  • Reducing friction by preparing in advance—lay out workout clothes or pre-pack lunch the night before.

5. Figure Out Your Finances

Money cannot guarantee happiness, but financial stability and clarity can significantly reduce stress and expand your choices. Financial wellness includes tracking your money, living within your means, saving for emergencies, and planning for the future.

Save and spend smartly

Start by understanding where your money currently goes. Then build a realistic plan to live below your means while still enjoying life.

  • Create a simple monthly budget that covers needs, financial goals, and wants.
  • Track your spending so you can adjust in real time rather than being surprised later.
  • Build an emergency fund to cover at least a few months of essential expenses if possible.
  • Pay down high-interest debt strategically using methods like the debt avalanche or snowball.
Money AreaFirst StepOngoing Habit
SpendingList all monthly bills and variable expenses.Review transactions weekly and adjust categories.
SavingOpen a dedicated savings account.Set up automatic transfers on payday.
DebtWrite down each balance and interest rate.Pay at least the minimum plus extra on your top-priority debt.
InvestingLearn the basics of diversified, long-term investing.Contribute regularly to a retirement or investment account.

Consider the future

Financial planning is not only about covering today’s bills; it is also about funding the future life you want. As you clarify your long-term goals, connect them to your money decisions now:

  • Decide what lifestyle you would like later in life—location, work, travel—and estimate how much it may cost.
  • Create retirement savings goals and contribute regularly to retirement accounts where available.
  • Protect your progress with appropriate insurance and, when relevant, basic estate planning.

When you feel more confident about your finances, it becomes easier to focus on personal growth, relationships, and experiences without constant money anxiety.

6. Nurture Your Environment

Your environment—both physical and social—shapes your habits and mindset more than you might realize. A supportive environment makes it easier to maintain good habits and harder to drift into behaviors that work against your goals.

Curate your physical space

A cluttered, chaotic space can make it difficult to think clearly and act intentionally. Consider:

  • Decluttering items you do not need, use, or love.
  • Creating small zones in your home: a calm corner for reading, a clear surface for work, a dedicated spot for exercise.
  • Keeping financial documents, planners, and tools organized and easy to access.

Protect your social environment

The people around you influence your beliefs, confidence, and spending habits. To nurture a healthy social environment:

  • Spend more time with people who support your growth and respect your boundaries.
  • Limit exposure to those who constantly criticize or pressure you to overspend.
  • Seek communities—online or offline—focused on similar values like saving, building wealth, health, or personal development.

7. Consider Your Routine

Your daily routine is where your life actually happens. Even small habits, repeated consistently, have a compound effect on your health, money, and mindset over the years.

Design supportive daily habits

Ask yourself whether your current routine reflects the life you say you want. You might consider:

  • Adding a short morning ritual that sets your intention—journaling, stretching, or reviewing your goals.
  • Planning your meals or snacks ahead of time to support your health and budget.
  • Scheduling focused blocks of time for work, learning, and rest instead of multitasking all day.

Audit and adjust regularly

Routines should work for you, not against you. Periodically review:

  • Which habits are moving you closer to your goals.
  • Which habits are draining your energy, money, or time.
  • Where you can introduce small tweaks, such as limiting social media time or preparing for the next day the night before.

8. Serve Others

Living your best life is not only about self-improvement. Serving others adds meaning, connection, and perspective. Acts of giving and kindness are linked to better mental health and a greater sense of well-being.

Look for meaningful ways to give

Service does not always mean money; it can also be time, skills, or encouragement. Consider:

  • Volunteering for causes that align with your values.
  • Mentoring someone who is earlier in their career or financial journey.
  • Supporting friends and family with practical help or by simply listening.

Even small, consistent acts of service can help you feel more connected and grateful for what you have.

9. Make Gratitude an Everyday Practice

Gratitude is more than saying “thank you.” It is the habit of intentionally noticing what is going well and what you already have. Regular gratitude practice is associated with higher life satisfaction and less stress.

Simple gratitude habits

Try one or two of these ideas and keep them simple enough that you can maintain them long term:

  • Write down three things you are grateful for each morning or evening.
  • Express appreciation to someone in your life through a message, note, or conversation.
  • When facing challenges, ask, “What is one thing I can still be grateful for in this situation?”

Gratitude does not mean ignoring problems. It simply helps you hold both difficulties and blessings in perspective.

Ways You Can Tell If You’re Living Life To The Fullest

There is no universal checklist for “living your best life,” but there are signs that you are moving in a healthy, aligned direction. These indicators can help you assess and recalibrate.

Key signs to look for

  • You have a clearer sense of what matters to you and are making choices that reflect those priorities.
  • Your daily habits support your long-term goals more often than they undermine them.
  • You feel more in control of your money, even if you are still working on paying off debt or saving.
  • Your relationships feel more supportive, honest, and respectful.
  • You experience gratitude regularly, even when life is not perfect.

Living Your Best Life Is Totally Possible

You do not need a perfect past, a high income, or a flawless plan to begin living your best life. You only need a willingness to be honest about where you are and to take consistent, purposeful steps toward where you want to be.

Start with one area—purpose, health, finances, routine, or relationships—and take a small action today. Over time, these small choices add up to a life that feels more intentional, fulfilling, and aligned with who you truly are.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Q: Where should I start if I feel overwhelmed by life changes?

Start with one area and one small action. For example, schedule a 30-minute money check-in, take a 10-minute walk, or write down three things you want from the next year. Focusing on one simple step reduces overwhelm and builds momentum.

Q: How can I live my best life on a limited income?

Living your best life is more about clarity, priorities, and habits than about income level. Track your spending, cut costs that do not align with your values, use free or low-cost learning resources, and focus on building small savings and skills over time.

Q: Do I need to know my exact life purpose before setting goals?

No. Your purpose can evolve. Start by noticing what matters to you now and set goals that reflect those values. As you take action and gain experience, your sense of purpose will become clearer.

Q: How often should I review my finances and goals?

A weekly check-in works well for day-to-day spending and progress, while a monthly review is useful for adjusting your budget and goals. A deeper review once or twice a year can help you realign your long-term plans with any changes in your life.

Q: What if I make mistakes or fall back into old habits?

Setbacks are normal. Instead of judging yourself, look at what happened, identify one lesson, and restart your habits with that insight. Progress comes from getting back on track repeatedly, not from never slipping.

References

  1. 9 Practical Tips For Living Your Best Life Now — Clever Girl Finance. 2023. https://www.clevergirlfinance.com/living-your-best-life/
  2. Zilioli, S., & Imami, L. Purpose in Life and Health: An Integrative Review — Annual Review of Organizational Psychology and Organizational Behavior. 2022-01-21. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-orgpsych-012221-093930
  3. Dweck, C. Mindset: The New Psychology of Success — Random House. 2006-02-28. https://doi.org/10.1037/e527772014-001
  4. Investing Basics — U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). 2023-09-15. https://www.investor.gov/introduction-investing/investing-basics
  5. Physical Activity — World Health Organization. 2022-10-05. https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/physical-activity
  6. Mental Health and Well-being — World Health Organization. 2022-06-17. https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/mental-health-strengthening-our-response
  7. Emmons, R. A., & Stern, R. Gratitude as a Psychotherapeutic Intervention — Journal of Clinical Psychology. 2013-08-29. https://doi.org/10.1002/jclp.22020
Sneha Tete
Sneha TeteBeauty & Lifestyle Writer
Sneha is a relationships and lifestyle writer with a strong foundation in applied linguistics and certified training in relationship coaching. She brings over five years of writing experience to fundfoundary,  crafting thoughtful, research-driven content that empowers readers to build healthier relationships, boost emotional well-being, and embrace holistic living.

Read full bio of Sneha Tete