· Diagnostics  · 6 min read

What's Stopping You? The Unfinished Life Assessment Explained

It was a sunny Tuesday morning across Africa. Sarah, a brilliant software engineer, sat with Dr.

It was a sunny Tuesday morning across Africa. Sarah, a brilliant software engineer, sat with Dr. Job Mogire. She felt a heavy weight, like her life was always about to start, but never quite did. Sarah had just finished the Unfinished Life Assessment. The results on the table showed her a truth she had tried to ignore.

Dr. Mogire, a cardiologist who once struggled with stuttering but became a great speaker, leaned closer. “Sarah,” he said calmly, “this assessment isn’t just answers. It’s a special check-up. It measures what’s really holding your life back. It’s what we look at closely before we plan your next steps.” This wasn’t just friendly advice. It was a clear plan, based on understanding people and the challenges they face in a busy city like Nairobi.

Is This a Quiz or a Real Check-Up?

The Unfinished Life Assessment isn’t like a fun quiz that tells you if you’re shy or outgoing. Instead, it’s a smart tool. It helps find the hidden reasons why successful people, especially in places like Nairobi, don’t finish their most important work. It looks at how your own thoughts and habits might be stopping you. This often leads to a quiet sadness, a feeling that life is always starting but never truly done. This assessment shows the real cost of not finishing things.

Dr. Mogire has a big idea called “Stop Dying Early.” It’s a main part of his House of Mastery. He believes that not finishing things can make you sick. Always feeling stressed, always having dreams you put off, can hurt your body. This assessment isn’t just about your feelings. It’s a medical tool. It helps map out these inner struggles. It shows the brain paths and habits that keep people stuck. It’s about understanding why you keep not finishing. We talked more about this in our article on how our brains help us finish tasks.

The questions in the assessment are very specific. Dr. Mogire spent ten years studying how people act. He used his experience as a doctor and his own journey to overcome challenges. Each question looks at one of five main areas: Yourself, Your Work, Your Body, Your Relationships, and Your Future. For example, questions about “Your Work” might ask if you love learning but never actually use what you learn. Or if you collect awards but don’t truly enjoy the work itself. These are common patterns for very capable people who still feel stuck.

Think about someone working hard across Africa. They often feel pressure from family and from trying to look successful in a city where everyone watches. The assessment shows how these outside pressures mix with inner habits. It measures the difference between who you seem to be online (like on LinkedIn) and who you are on a Sunday morning. It shows the specific things that lead to feeling stuck in your job and your feelings. It’s a deep look at what professionals don’t talk about, and how much it costs them.

The Unfinished Life Assessment is the first step in what Dr. Mogire calls “the best coaching.” It gives clear facts. It doesn’t offer quick fixes or empty promises. Instead, it gives a clear, medical diagnosis. It’s like a cardiologist using a machine to check your heart’s beat. This clear understanding helps the House of Mastery give the best training. It’s made for your specific habits, not just general self-help ideas.

Why Do We Stop Before We Finish?

The assessment looks at many important parts of how you operate. It goes past just the problems to find the real causes. It’s a deep dive into why we don’t finish things. It shows how people accidentally build walls that stop their own progress. This is especially true for those who always start new projects with excitement, but then give up. The assessment helps find out why starting feels better than finishing for these people. It also explains what’s happening in their brain that causes this.

One big thing the assessment looks at is fear that looks like high standards. This is often seen in people who want everything to be perfect. It’s not about doing great work. It’s about using the idea of being perfect to avoid finishing things. The assessment helps people see how this habit, which often gets praised, slowly drains their energy. It stops them from sharing their most important work. This is a key idea for people across Africa’s busy job market, where these habits can cost a lot.

Another important part is finding the “Decorated Stranger” habit. This is when your awards and successes don’t match how you feel inside. The assessment looks at this difference. It asks questions that show if you secretly feel like your life isn’t adding up to the person you thought you’d be. Many successful people feel this way, especially those who have dealt with tough social and work situations. The assessment helps you understand how this habit starts, what it costs, and how to break it.

Dr. Mogire is a cardiologist, and this helps him see these habits in a special way. He knows that hiding your feelings can hurt your body. He sees that unfinished emotional business can lead to real health problems. So, the assessment includes parts that gently check these connections. It helps you see what a cardiologist notices that a coach might miss. It helps people understand that your body remembers your habits. To truly finish things, you need to look at both your mind and your body.

The Unfinished Life Assessment also shows the “Three Masks” people wear to hide their unfinished lives. These are: fear that looks like wisdom, being busy that looks like making progress, and showing off that looks like success. By finding out which masks you wear most, the assessment helps you understand yourself better. It lets you see how these masks trick you into thinking your habits aren’t really habits. This clear view is important to stop the cycle of not finishing things.

In the end, the assessment measures not just what you do, but why you do it. And more importantly, why you don’t do what you know you should. It’s a deep look at how your inner system works. It shows why things like motivation and self-control often don’t work. That’s because they try to fix what you do without fixing the main problem. The House of Mastery starts with your inner system, and this assessment makes that possible. You can learn more about Dr. Mogire on his LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jobmogire/.

Key Takeaway

The Unfinished Life Assessment is a special check-up. It helps you find the hidden reasons why you might not be finishing your most important goals. It’s like a doctor finding out what’s really going on, so you can get the right help to move forward. It helps you understand yourself better and start truly finishing what you begin.

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