Written in 1997, Barbara Ann Kipfer’s The Wish List is a tool that uses creative prompts to assess one’s priorities for a life well-spent--with a few 1990’s throwbacks to liven up the experience. While we no longer need dream of a voice-activated VCR, the discerning reader can peruse the thousands of proposed wishes and check off those items that resonate with them, and, hopefully, take the necessary steps to make these things happen. It’s like a bucket list, although some of the wishes are pure fantasy, such as taking a cross-Atlantic flight without crying babies, or getting a haircut by a hair dresser who never says a word. Obviously, some outcomes we can’t control. For those we can, however, Kipfer’s suggestions trigger a longing to pursue the highs and lows of life, to experience the paths often left untrodden. Some prompts ignite a desire for more adventure: earn a living doing what you love, rock the boat, bite off more than you can chew; while other suggestions encourage more temperance: live within your means, ignore discouraging people, or the ultimate challenge, be polite to telemarketers. The memories we make watching comets and jumpstarting cars are worth the slight bit of planning and gumption fostered by reading a book like this. Sure, you probably won’t be able to invent teleportation or an invisibility cloak, but you certainly could travel with no destination. Or adopt a person in a nursing home. Or become a volunteer tutor. Or just play like you did when you were 8.
I appreciated the sporadic blank lines interspersed for the reader to jot down ideas as they come to mind. Some of mine are:
1. Get a role in a commercial
2. Climb Mt. Vodno
3. Build a false door in a library
4. Take a sailing vacation
5. Get an elaborate henna tattoo
6. Participate in a flash mob
7. See whales in nature
8. Hold my stupid tarantula
9. See the Aurora Borealis
10. Finish the book, The Wish List
See? Some of my dreams have already come true, and it can work for you, too! As you read, be sure to additionally make checkmarks beside items you have already experienced. These are wonderful reminders of your accomplishments and a call to thank God for this amazing privilege called life.