When Life Has No Meaning

If you're feeling as though life has no meaning, maybe now is the time to look within as you come closer to discovering your life purpose.
Do you often feel as though life has no meaning? If so, you may want to think seriously about searching out your personal life purpose.

Having and living a life that converts into contentment calls for an effort on your part to realize precisely why you were placed here on Earth.

The problem most of us must face up to as we voyage through life is that there are a large number of individuals, thought processes, and events that push us in various directions. Your parents maybe pressed you to live a certain path, as did society in general. Whether or not this direction was the one you in truth longed for inside possibly wasn’t that which you sincerely hoped for.

Then one day, you wake up with a mood of emptiness and find that life has no significance for you. You’re simply moving through the motions, living roughly zombie-like as you stagger through every day.

Although there are some people who seem born with their life mission already at the forefront of their minds, you weren’t so blessed. You recognize you were meant for something bigger, but you simply can’t seem to catch on to what it is you should be doing with your life.

Let’s gaze into a number of activities you might make use of to release your life purpose and discontinue your dreaded thoughts that tell you life has no meaning.

First, look seriously at the types of topics you’ve always been avid about. Have you always found yourself magnetized toward animals? Or maybe arts, crafts, music or poetry convey passion into your soul. What about teaching, business, education, etc? Begin crafting an inventory of whatever makes you feel magical inside.

Secondly, create a record of all the activities you like to do. Rather than general subject areas, now begin thinking about the material activities you like, such as painting, writing, playing a certain sport, boating, racing, singing, cooking, reading, gardening, etc.

Thirdly, pull from within all that stuff you’re naturally good at. What talents and skills have you been wonderful at all throughout life? What always comes easily to you? Also, you might have become very good at specific skills because you’ve had experience in them over the years.

Lastly, start to list out all that is important to you. This time, you must focus more on issues that impact the world in general, rather than only thinking on a personal level. What’s important to you as it pertains to things such as worldly causes, events, situations, people, animals, groups, etc?

When you begin to center on these issues, you’ll uncover that you’ll stop thinking life has no meaning. Look for patterns between your four lists. Look for connections. What keeps popping up? Although this is only the initial step toward finding your life mission, you should begin to find a feeling of expectation.

As you pass through life, your natural gifts have been given to you to assist you as you navigate toward your objective, which are the things that are most important to you. Because you have excitement toward the things you love to do and the things that are most cherished by you, you’ll have plenty of energy to keep on going.

Life has no meaning when you haven’t handed yourself over to all that is most vital and passionate to you in a way that brings substantial assistance to the persons close to you. You’ll be able to help the world once you understand how to live through the activities you love to do, which use your natural abilities in the process.

Matthew M. DeSilva is the writer and creator of Achieving Life Abundance, where you can digest the free mini-course called "7 Magical Secrets to Living an Extraordinary & Abundant Life", that will guide you as you work toward discovering life abundance, as well as stopping any feelings telling you life has no meaning.

By Matthew DeSilva
Published: 9/6/2008
 
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