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Navigating the Journey to Finding Your Place in Life

Navigating the Journey to Finding Your Place in Life

The idea of figuring out who you are meant to be is one of the crucial decisions you make today, impacting your tomorrow. It is like peeking through the lens of a camera, where you manually control and determine the amount of light passing through your clicks.

With the right shutter, you can capture a great photo that’s even eligible for an international photo contest. Similarly, you want that kind of factor in your life — that ‘factor’ to help you determine your identity and purpose in life.

To have a glimpse of that ‘factor,’ here are a few ways to get you started.

If you’re like me, who passed the age of thirty and still wandering and wondering what your purpose is, let’s try to follow back the breadcrumbs.

It means to look back on your previous years and find clues.

Did you love making presentations?

Did you love wearing bling and styles?

Were you the go-to advisor of your schoolmates when they had intense personal problems?

Did you enjoy speaking to different people and talking about life?

Did you love writing letters or cards to your friends and classmates?

Did you volunteer to provide photography outputs for your friend’s wedding or anniversary day?

Did you draw or paint something to give as a gift instead of buying it?

Did you draft a colleague’s resume?

Did you facilitate a company party creating the programs and games?

Did you create presentations, so the team understands your report without being asked?

There are thousands of questions to ponder. Make a list of what interests you versus what you want to do.

While it’s true that what matters most in finding your place in life is your present and future, it is equally important that you know what you’ve WANTED and connects it to what you WANT right now.

Now that you have listed all that you wanted and what you want, try to listen to others. Listen to your friends when they say you’re good at cooking.

When your boss mentions — you’re great at presentations, acknowledge it and think about what else you can do to improve.

Listen to your colleagues when they always appreciate how you dress, much more when they anticipate your outfit the next day.

Notice when people are consistently amazed when it’s easier for you to simplify complex texts.

When people recognize something in you, they find it valuable and useful. These may be things you take for granted or don’t even know that you acquire because you are focusing on a different aspect of your life.

I’m a fan of self-help books and articles. Plus, I also bought not too many ebooks on personal development topics. On top of that, I downloaded hundreds of self-growth ebooks.

Ninety percent of it will tell you, “It’s okay; you’ll figure it out naturally — ONE DAY.”

Or — “It will all fall into the right places.”

Some will say — “Where you are right now is where you are bound to be.”

Although I’m a sucker for these niches, they missed one critical step in surviving — to keep trying and trying and trying. They say it might not be your calling if you fail several times and try a different path.

It may be true to someone else, but not to everyone.

I love writing and started blogging 11 years ago, lasting nearly two years. Then I started my writing gig two years after, but it only lasted for three months. Why? Despite my love for writing, I didn’t have a passion for learning and only waited for opportunities to pass.

Finally, after a few years, I launched this blog. Furthermore, I started my writing gig, which thankfully supported me during the pandemic crisis when I lost my job.

The point here is, don’t stop falling. Though I’m not at the peak of this dream YET, I know I’m on my way. It took me over a decade to realize and understand pointers 1, 2, 3, and the following points.

Convert those failures to lessons. Try and fail. Try and fail.

Once you’ve found your passion, intersect it with your potential.

What are your gifts? What are your talents? Where are you good at?

Sometimes, you may find your passion but are not good at it. For example, I have a passion for music; however, music doesn’t like me.

Some people focus on improving their vocal cords, and that is okay. I knew a few who had worse tones than mine, but after spending time with their vocal coaches, their voices are honestly impressive.

At this point, we are linking points 1 to 3 plus monetizing. How will you monetize your potential and passion so that you can support your family or help other people?

If you cannot create a junction, you may want to reassess your potential and passion. So, your passion, potential, and how you monetize should intersect with each other. Check my example of the Venn diagram below.

If you see my resume, you will learn that I hop from one post to another. I took my years to discover a job I could fit into, one that I could work on my purpose or one I don’t have to drag myself out of bed every morning.

The answer is you can’t. Because no matter how long you will be in an institution, there are more moments of giving up, more moments of backing off, and more moments of trying to leave, but life circumstances won’t let you.

Don’t give up. Age is irrelevant when finding who you are meant to be. I’m nearly in my forties now and slowly opening my sense of purpose. I knew it even two decades ago but didn’t take action. I didn’t pursue what I wanted, stopped, and was afraid to take risks.

How old is too old to find your purpose?

Charles Darwin published his book “On the Origin of the Species” when he was 50.

Vera Wang found her fashion niche at age 40, after years of being a journalist and figure skater.

Ariana Huffington launched her news publication, The Huffington Post (which I’ve been dying to guest post for the last three weeks), at age 55.

You can also find your calling at any age. You just have to discover it, work on it, and sacrifice.

Navigating the journey to finding your place in life is a significant stage in your life. Hence, don’t rush your decisions. Learning things you want to do and understanding things you wish to pursue is overwhelming.

Moreover, try things. It’s better to try it now, even if you end up hating it than regret not attempting it.

Lastly, listen to the child in your heart no matter how and where your adult head leads you. Finding who you are meant to be is a sacrifice. You have to work for it and fight for it.

Your decisions and actions after finding your identity and purpose are what matters MOST.

It took me over a decade to discover who I was meant to be; more than ten years to recognize the broken things I should have fixed earlier. Yet, it gives me lessons that I’m pleased to share with you.

If you’ve not yet found the path in your life, try these pointers and share how you are managing.

If you’ve already uncovered who are you meant to be, mind if you share your lessons in the comment box below?

*Note: There is an affiliate link in this post, meaning, at no additional cost to you, I will earn a commission if you click through and make a purchase. Thank you.

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