Finding your purpose in life: could it be this simple?

The meaning of life: to create your own reality?
The meaning of life: to create your own reality?
Image by Nussbox, via Flickr

I’ve long struggled with trying to find meaning and purpose in my life. Why am I here? What’s most important? What should I be striving for? During the religious times, add “what does God want me to do?”

Tons of books have been written on this subject, the most obvious one that springs to my mind being The Purpose-driven Life. I read that, but it didn’t really clear anything up for me.

Some people seem to have it figured out. Look at Ash Ambirge, look at Chris Guillebeau, look at Leo Babauta. But most of the rest of us seem to be adrift. What are we doing? What’s it all about?

One thing I’ve noticed in my life is that if I’m enjoying what I’m doing, I don’t care if it has any grand design or profound meaning, or any purpose whatsoever, really. It’s when I’m discontented that I find myself demanding, “what is the purpose of doing this?!” and railing about pointlessness and wasting time. I always thought that was just a personality quirk, probably a sign that I’m hedonistic, or just childish.

But this week, I happened to read both of these:

“The point of living is to enjoy life.” Reclaim Your Dreams by Jonathan Mead

“…make being happy the most important thing in your life. Because, let’s face it… isn’t it?”“How to find true happiness in 2011” by Lachlan Cotter (The Art of Audacity)

Could it really be so simple? The point is just to be happy?

the meaning of life: to live life to the fullest?
The meaning of life: to live life to the fullest?
Image by Nussbox, via Flickr

I don’t know the answer, but what if this were true? Thinking about it feels like a rush of freedom.

If the point is just to be happy, then doing what I want to do is what I’m here for. I don’t have to spend energy worrying about whether I’m on the right path or being virtuous enough or profound enough. I can just do the things I like, and I’ve got the right answer.

Come to think of it, a lot of perceived inadequacies seem to melt away. Suddenly the facts that I’m not interested in history, don’t want to go to lectures, and get a big headache from the news and politics, no longer mean I’m an insufficient intellectual or a bad citizen. They just mean those things are outside the scope of my purpose, at least for now, so they wouldn’t be a good use of my time. Thus, skipping them isn’t bad, it’s good!

Similarly, I never have any idea what God wants from me, if there even is a God… my problem no more. I don’t have to ask, seek, knock, strive, and keep talking, begging, praying, into the echoing void, trying to guess the right answer or what would please. I can just relax and enjoy life.

Even setting priorities and making decisions becomes much simpler. If the purpose is to be happy and enjoy life, you do the things that make you happy or bring you joy. Not only are they the fun things, they become the important things! (Somehow in my default system, fun things are automatically low on the importance scale–in fact, they’re usually the first to get cut.)

If the fun things are also the most important, that removes most of the conflict about what to do. Suddenly everything lines up and falls into place.

It almost seems too good to be true.

The meaning of life: 42?
The meaning of life: 42
Image by Nussbox, on Flickr

The most obvious objection to this idea is that it’s too selfish. Mere happiness isn’t enough; without helping others, we can never find true fulfillment. But hmm, even there, it sounds like the goal is still making ourselves feel good, we’re just calling it “fulfillment” instead of “happiness.”

Besides, you can’t truly give to others unless you have a foundation of strength and a wellspring of love within yourself to give from. Otherwise, it comes from fear and guilt and can’t be a true gift. Authentic happiness–not the kind where you stick smiley faces on everything and tell yourself a lot of cheery-sounding lies, but deep, real happiness–is what enables that strength and love, which make giving possible.

Is this hopelessly naïve, or have I been making everything way too complicated all this time? If anyone has any insights or thoughts they’d like to share, please comment–I’d love to hear them.

8 thoughts on “Finding your purpose in life: could it be this simple?”

  1. Did somebody say “breakthrough”?

    You hit so many profound insights in this post, Cara. And you’re absolutely right about finding meaning in your life. People are most concerned with the “meaning of life” when they are suffering. But when you’re joyful—truly joyful—you realise that’s all the reason and meaning you could ever need. Seriously—what could be a better reason for life then joy? If you find one, be sure to email me. But I’m not holding my breath 🙂

    I struggled with these questions for a long, long time too. I thought surely to make my life meaningful I have to make sacrifices. That idea is laughable to me now. If you’re concerned about being selfish or that you’re supposed to give your life to others, all you need to realise is that every single soul on the planet—even the ones that seem to you to be so underprivileged or needy—they all have the same capacity for happiness as you do. Your using their deprivation as your excuse to deny yourself happiness does absolutely nothing for them. You making an example of happiness is absolutely the best thing you can do for the world. Happiness is not a scarce commodity. When you align with what’s good for you, then—only then—can you radiate it into the world.

    “It almost seems to good to be true” — guess what? Life is good!

    1. Thanks, Lach!

      Seriously—what could be a better reason for life then joy? If you find one, be sure to email me. But I’m not holding my breath

      I’ll get right on that! 😉

      Seriously, thank you very much for all the leading questions you’ve been asking me. That’s what led me here, more than anything.

  2. Yes, another great post Cara! I agree. Our being extremely happy or depressingly miserable doesn’t really matter to anyone else on the planet – only ourselves. Some people may try to change how we feel (but this is more for them than us – I’ve been guilty of doing that), but most aren’t bothered. I don’t mean this to sound harsh as most people are doing what they think will help us, but only we can choose how we feel.

    I think we spend far too much time trying to live like other people do than actually living our own lives. I’m starting to ‘do my own thing’. I’ve been told I’m being selfish and my first reaction is the defensive ‘no I’m not!’, but I want to be happy. I can’t do that if I’m doing what everyone else wants me to do. I want to help other people too, but I mustn’t neglect myself in the process. I don’t see that as being selfish.

    Like you say, when I’m doing something I enjoy everything else takes a backseat. I like doing my own thing. I have to do that by myself. So it’s not selfish.

    Am I looking at this the wrong way? It doesn’t feel wrong…

    1. Thanks, Tom! I think selfishness is one of the most misunderstood things around. Yes, it’s bad to be a jerk and walk all over other people, but you can be selfish without being a jerk. Just plain taking care of yourself and doing what makes you happy is not bad, it’s good. People act like it’s a huge automatic sin or something.

      Go you–make yourself happy!

    1. That is a great quote–thank you for sharing it! And I love your painting. The more I look at it, the more I like it.

Leave a Reply to Lach Cancel reply