You want to be the one with the power. But you’re not.
You want it be one way– you want to be happy, free, and have the right to pursue your passions and live a more meaningful life– but it’s the other way. You choose to live the life that you’re living, and don’t change even though you think you want to.
So you hate what you do– you hate your job or your physical health or your debt or your depression or your life in general– and I’m crazy?
You can’t be serious.
I’m living a more meaningful life now. I’m pursuing my passions (writing both fiction and non-fiction). I’m in the best shape of my life. I’m more free than you. I’m more passionate than you. I’m growing as an individual. And I’m contributing to other people in a more meaningful way.
And you’re doing what? You’re just talking.
Make change a must
It’s not too late to stop talking and get up off your ass.
Do something.
Take action.
Turn off the TV.
Shutdown your computer.
Get out there and act.
Or you could just sit back and do nothing. You can just keep being you, content in the vast pool of mediocrity.
And you can continue down your current path if you’d like, and if you work really, really hard you can end up there– six figure job, all the stuff you can imagine– which on the surface didn’t look too bad. Hell, I looked really successful too.
But displaying status symbols is simple. They’re easy trophies– but I wasn’t actually successful at all. I had luxury cars and a house with more bedrooms than inhabitants, a bunch of gadgets I hardly used, clothes I didn’t wear, and all the trappings that our heavily mediated culture tells us that we should have (and a nice size debt to accompany those “accomplishments”). But I wasn’t happy at all, which is perhaps the true measure of success.
The people who envied my life didn’t see the other side, they didn’t see the life behind the curtain. I did a good job of masking my fear, my debt, my anxiety, my stress, my loneliness, my guilt, my depression. I displayed a impressive facade, revealing only what I thought the world wanted me to reveal.
Worst of all, my life was void of any real meaning, and it felt as if I was flying in ever-diminishing circles.
Not too long ago, I was you. I was that guy: Joshua Fields Millburn, the unhappy young executive. But then I did three things to change my life:
- I made the descion to change my life.
- I made that change a must instead of a should.
- I took action.
I’m not saying that it’s easy, and sometimes you’ll be terrified by the changes you’re making, but it’s so much better than the alternative. It’s so much better than walking with the living dead.
It’s not too late for you. Make the decision to change, make it a must, and take action. You deserve to be happy. You deserve a better life.
But if you refuse to change, then perhaps you deserve the life that you already have.
-Julien Smith