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What I Did When I Felt Lost and Purposeless

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“A good traveler has no fixed plans and is not intent on arriving.”  ~Lao Tzu

About a year ago, I came across an e-course titled “Find Your Purpose in 15 Minutes.” I found this course during a time when purpose was something I was actively looking for. For the first time in my life, I wasn’t sure what to do next, and without anything to work toward I was looking for a new motivation to pull me forward.

The e-course I stumbled upon represents a society increasingly concerned with fulfilling its destiny. There is an unsettling pressure, particularly from the self-help community, to live a life of purpose. And when I couldn’t find my destiny, let alone fulfill it, a sense of failure washed over me.

Now, I cannot tell you whether it is possible to find your purpose in 15 minutes, because I never purchased the e-course. But I can say it is entirely possible to find meaning in a purposeless life.

The Appeal of Purpose

Purpose can provide an answer to the question “Why am I here?” It can give you a sense of direction and drive forward in life.

Some people might find purpose in meaningful work, using their skills and talent to serve the needs of the world. Others find purpose in raising a family, caring for loved ones, or being an active member of their community.

Having a purpose will make you feel like you are doing what you’re supposed to do. Like you are living out your life’s mission and making a contribution.

In a world where most of our basic human needs are met, I suppose it’s no wonder that we are now looking to become more deeply fulfilled. When you no longer have to struggle for mere survival, it’s only natural that you pause and ask yourself what it’s all for.

The Problem with Purpose

Living a purposeful life sounds wonderful, and I’m not here to devalue anyone’s purposeful existence. Rather, I would like to remind those that haven’t found purpose yet that life can be meaningful and fulfilling without it.

The problem with purpose is not at all the actual purpose, but rather our intense attachment to finding it. Doing work we love, contributing to the world in a meaningful way, and leaving our mark has become such a prized endeavor that I can often sense a deep existential worry creep into conversations with my peers.

For example, I’ve noticed that many of my friends feel angsty when they don’t know what to do next in life or when they aren’t sure if their current endeavors are what they’re meant to do. I too have felt uncomfortable with the fact that I am not serving the world in big and meaningful ways.

We seem to collectively feel that if we don’t have some grand end-goal to fulfill we are somehow failing at life. And with this, we are passing on the opportunity to create a meaningful life without having a purpose.

The Alternative to Purpose

This is where I would like to offer an alternative. Not to purpose itself, but to the glorification of purpose and the frantic gold-rush that we have embarked on to find that one thing in life that will bring us meaning and fulfillment.

I do believe that living a meaningful life is important. Having no sense of why you are even on this planet can feel restless at best and nihilist at worst. But instead of anchoring yourself in finding purpose, I suggest you anchor yourself in values instead.

Personal values are guides that can help you navigate the road map of life, even if you don’t know where you’re heading. More importantly, they’re a lot easier to find than purpose.

Think of a few people you admire. What values do they exemplify? Courage, empathy, ambition? If you look up to anyone, it’s most likely not because of their achievements, but rather their character, which has helped them reach those achievements. What in their character would you like to improve in yours?

Personal values allow you to live anchored in what is meaningful to you, whether that’s serving others, being brave, or taking radical responsibility for your life. Values, unlike purpose, allow you to infuse meaning into every present moment rather than only finding meaning in one noble cause.

If you value kindness, for example, then living from a place of kindness can transform mundane daily activities into opportunities to be kind. A boring job can become a playground where you practice your kindness. And an annoying family member becomes your opportunity to show up with compassion and consideration.

My Journey with Purposelessness

I used to navigate life with a sense of urgency, always moving forward in an attempt to fulfill my mission in life. I would set goal after goal, convinced that once I had achieved them a sense of meaning would arise.

But as I worked through the common milestones in life, the meaningfulness never came. So I would continue to set new goals, certain that I just hadn’t found the one thing yet that would make me feel whole.

When I was stuck at a major crossroads last year, I slowly shifted my focus from finding my purpose to adding meaning to the everyday. A year later, I still don’t know what I am meant to do in life, but I am content to live in the question for now. To sit with purposelessness.

In the meantime, I find meaning in cultivating my character by living out my values. Personally, I value courage, tenderness, and depth at the moment, so I use everyday activities and challenges to put these values to practice.

The value of tenderness, for example, encourages me to soften my inner self and stay open to life in the face of hardships. I try to cultivate this part of my character by always being compassionate with others, particularly those who challenge me. I also practice tenderness through self-compassion, allowing myself to be weak and vulnerable at times when staying strong is not the compassionate option.

I live a life of courage not only by doing things that scare me, but also by truly listening to what my heart wants and speaking my truth. Nurturing courage has faced me with some nerve-racking situations, such as quitting a job that no longer fulfilled me, but rising to those situations has given me the strength to forge a life that feels true to who I am.

Lastly, I try to cultivate a sense of depth in my life. Rather than scrolling through Instagram, I often spend hours getting my teeth stuck in an interesting book. And rather than traveling the world, I have made it my mission to revisit old favorites over and over again. To get into the nooks and crannies of a city I know well, sucking out the last little marrow from its foundations, offers me a deeper way of traveling not found in weekend getaways or exotic backpacking trips.

Nurturing these values has given me the chance to see each and every moment as an opportunity to grow and develop my character. While I’m figuring out the why for my life, values keep me on track with the how. And, unlike purpose, I can swap out and play with my set of values as much as I’d like.

Perhaps one day I will stumble upon my purpose. Or perhaps I will look back on my life in old age and finally recognize that I had been living my purpose all along, and finally understand what it was all for. But for now I am simply curious to experience life as it unfolds, finding meaning along the way by anchoring myself in values.

If you’re currently feeling a little lost in life, then know that it is okay to sit with that feeling. Know that it is okay to not fix away this feeling in 15 minutes. And know that if you simply show up every day with an open mind and unfold your soul into the tapestry of possibilities, your path will be full of meaning and wonderment, even without that illusive thing called purpose.

About Lizzy Dean

Clarissa is a dreamer and a writer from the UK. After a health crisis in 2016, she now chronicles her attempts at cultivating a slower and more meaningful life on her blog clarissadean.com. On this platform, she explores how to live in the question and anchor into the present in a non-judgemental and (self-)compassionate way.

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Pieter
Pieter

Great article.

Nothing In my opinion, has created more anxiety and angst then the modern-day misunderstanding of the pursuit of this thing we call purpose and meaning.

Purpose and meaning are personal experiences that one gets to notice and can occur taking out the garbage or curing cancer. As you hint at, often it is the fear of uncertainty, doubt and the pursuit of such experiences as something to grasp/attach onto that keeps us from noticing its been their all along.

“Each of us has meaning (purpose) and we bring it to life. It is a waste to be asking the question when you are the answer.” ― Joseph Campbell.
“We shall not cease from exploration, and the end of all our exploring will be to arrive where we started and know the place for the first time.” – T. S. Eliot

I wonder if in the pursuit of purpose, we aren’t really looking for something else.? Acceptance, being seen and or acknowledgment maybe?

Recommend Rebecca Solnit book ‘A Field Guide to Getting Lost’

Wishbone Ash
Wishbone Ash

Exactly what I was looking for. I was actually feeling lost and trying all kinds of stuff just to feel that spark with that one only thing in life that can give me that purpose.

Aissatou Sunjata
Aissatou Sunjata

Truly interesting. The “why am I here” or purpose. I have come to realize at least in my own life, the purpose is to learn more about who I am. To remember some of the innocent foundation of who I was and incorporate it with what I have learned through my experiences as an adult who has had experiences which challenged me. Each lesson, as I call them leading me to finding out or confirming something about myself and how then it relates to the world at large. Along the way, I have mentored, guided others and learned more about myself while helping someone else. What I have come to realize is that the cells that formed me could have instead done so in a variety of outcomes. I could have been a boy, or twins or not have been someone alive at all. As I get older, I do not waste precious time with the universal question many may continue to ask. Simply, enjoy the lulls of life. And know that whatever comes my way is meant to teach me something I did not know about myself before.

Cecilia J. Olson Simpson
Cecilia J. Olson Simpson

This article really spoke to me in emphasizing VALUES over PURPOSE. Everything becomes purposeful when you’re living out your values. Thank you so much for your insight & wisdom. It’s just what I needed to read.

Amy
Amy

Lizzy, what an awesome essay. I have struggled with figuring out my purpose for so long, and feeling lazy and pointless because I haven’t. I feel other people must look down on me for not being more productive. But being in the moment and living each day through the values I cherish
is such a kinder way to live my life. Thank you!

Missy Koeppel
Missy Koeppel

Truly impactful – thank you for writing it. Finding purpose has been something I’ve struggled with for most of my adult life, and I love how you not only give me an answer – live my values, rather than my purpose – but give me a strategy.

DeAnna Smith
DeAnna Smith

Thank you for this! I’ve been struggling with this for a while and searching for how to make my life meaningful and have a big grand purpose but this has sunk into me that I need to shift how I approach life and not be in such a rush to achieve something major. Thanks so much again I really cant thank you enough!

Stefi

This is lovely – thank you for your honesty and frankness. Too often, being goal-oriented in life makes us so anxiety-ridden to pursue the checkboxes of our existence, instead of just sitting in the uncomfortable-ness and allowing each and every day to be a gift. What a great essay to read.

Linda @ Fit Fed and Happy | th

Thank you for this! It’s giving me inspiration for a new blog post … and since I am a new graduate, I have been feeling lost in job searching so this was truly helpful. Values over purpose! 🙂

Melayahm
Melayahm

I have the feeling that a lot of the depression I feel comes from feeling that I’ve wasted my time, my life, because I never stick to anything, I’ve never felt driven to pursue one thing apart from in short bursts. I have no overarching purpose because nothing ever feels that important, that fulfilling or meaningful to keep me interested for along time. Just a general enjoyment of making things, but even what I want to make changes from month to month. So perhaps this is what I need. I shall ponder this carefully.

mike
mike

I never ever thought, that purposeless could be a potential answer. Thank you Lizzy.
Ever since i been battling with myself and issues, along with the “incidents”, I never once found the answer still.

I believe I will feel insecure-ness if i were to psycho myself that there is no need to keep searching or have an answer for it. Telling myself that “You can stop now. You can take a break now.”

But I guess, maybe for once. I should and/or perhaps give it a try.

Amy
Amy
Reply to  Pieter

I really love this comment. Thank you for posting it.

Lizzy
Reply to  Pieter

I agree with Amy, what a beautiful comment. Those quotes you added gave me goosebumps!

Thank you for the book recommendation as well. It sounds like a book I would enjoy reading.

Lizzy
Reply to  Missy Koeppel

Thank you for reading <3

I think (lack of) purpose is something we all struggle with from time to time, particularly in the modern-day world, where ‘anything is possible’. I hope that a focus on values rather than purpose will be helpful for you as well.

Lizzy

I am so glad you found it useful, Cecilia <3

Lizzy
Reply to  Amy

Being kind to yourself is so important! I often remind myself that if a thought is costing me my inner peace, it is already too expensive.

Lizzy

Thank you for sharing your insights! I hope that one day I will get to a place where the big questions in life don’t seem so big to me anymore.

The way you talk about your experience reminds me of the final sentence in Albert Camus’ essay, where he writes: “In the end we must imagine Sisyphus happy.” Perhaps that is the secret to living after all ;).

Clarissa Dean
Reply to  Wishbone Ash

I am glad it was helpful!

Clarissa Dean

Thank you Linda, I would love to read your blog post once it is finished 🙂

Clarissa Dean
Reply to  Stefi

Thank you for your kind words <3

Clarissa Dean
Reply to  DeAnna Smith

Thank you, Anna, for leaving such a kind comment!

Clarissa Dean
Reply to  Melayahm

Perhaps a life enjoyed is a life not wasted. 🙂

Your comment reminds me of a poem by James Wright about the delights of wasting your life: https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/47734/lying-in-a-hammock-at-william-duffys-farm-in-pine-island-minnesota

Clarissa Dean
Reply to  mike

Thank you for your comment, Mike <3

Isn't it interesting how hard we are on ourselves sometimes? Perhaps giving yourself a break is exactly what you need right now. As Pablo Neruda wrote so beautifully:

"If we were not so single-minded about keeping our lives moving, and for once could do nothing, perhaps a huge silence might interrupt this sadness of never understanding ourselves."

mike
mike
Reply to  Clarissa Dean

Welcome Clarissa. Just wanting to voice out thoughts instead of keeping within.

Katarzyna Niewiadomska
Katarzyna Niewiadomska

Thank you for this post!
I’m at the point in my life, where I’m trying really hard to answer the question “why am I here?!”. The idea of finally finding a meaning & fact, that you said you also had a time in your life when you were asking the same questions, sounds so calming and soothing.
But at the same time, even if I feel quite relieved, it’s really hard for me to acknowledge and start right now truly believing what I just read. All my life I was so sure that there is that “mystic” purpose, that we should find. It’s not so easy to actually believe that maybe there is no such thing, because it changes the whole idea of what life should be and that terrifies me a little bit.
One thing I know for sure is that I’m tired of looking for the purpose and constantly feeling lack of something. I really want to feel meaning in my life one day, but I just have some question for you – Did you have any doubts about that new vision of life? And if you did, how did you overcome them? How did you manage to really convince yourself, that there’s no need for looking for the purpose and instead just make your everyday life meaningful?