
With anything in life we need to understand purpose. For the sake of our purpose here (see what I did there?), I am defining purpose as our overarching/driving goal or direction in life. There is a time for play and experimentation so we can learn about ourselves, the world around us, and how we fit in and what we like/what works for us. But we can’t take action without purpose forever because it will end up nowhere. Look, I will even admit there is a time for wandering to see what the path ahead is like but at some point, even that too needs some direction otherwise it’s just walking. When we add purpose to what we do, we have meaning and a goal. I’m not saying the goal has to be Earth shattering—sometimes we just need to have a point and let the effect ripple out as it may. Sometimes the point is simply to create less stress in our lives and in doing so we are an example to our friends and neighbors, or our role is simply to find how we complement and fit in. Find what our piece of the puzzle is and fill it in.
Where do fishing and hunting come in? Both have the intent of securing a goal, a target. Both require patience, focus, and dedication. Both require time and practice to figure out how to get the target, and learning how to adapt to conditions to get the target. But with fishing, we often catch the target and release it while in hunting we bring it down for good—so we might be able to say it is the long versus the short game in some regards. When we set a goal to fish, we are talking long term, setting the goal, picking a spot and developing our skill and allowing it to come to us. Hunting we can either set up and wait or we move, chasing the prey (depending on what we’re hunting for). In both circumstances we need to read the environment and learn to adapt as necessary. We need to learn when to move and when to hold.
The reality is life is both—we need to know how to fish and hunt. We won’t know which to do unless we have a purpose. The purpose will tell us the best way to go about the task, and even then, sometimes the same task requires us to switch between both as we break down the individual components of it. But we need to know why we do what we do. It’s been interesting lately as I’ve discussed more openly some issues with a few of my colleagues and we are all sharing the same feeling of frustration, melancholy, and even some malaise about our current positions—we all have slightly different roles, we are all in different stages of our lives, and we have been with this company anywhere from 5-30 years. Nearly all of us have said that we want something else—we don’t feel the same sense of purpose anymore. One of our group is leaving for an entirely new state and they are struggling with components of it because they DO like the job but that too gives the opportunity to start hunting for a new passion and purpose. It is different when the person wants to begin that hunt and when they don’t, but this stands to show that we can have different purposes at different stages in our lives.
When we know our purpose, or the purpose of our stage, we can welcome it and find our drive again and begin the hunt. Sometimes that direction changes and it is ok to feel both lost and certain about where we are going. How we handle it and communicate and how we feel about our choices is what matters. That and the ability to make the choice. I have made no secret of my indecisiveness and even my fear to make choices. Part of that is simply me mired in old belief, stuck in what I was taught and what people around me learned/felt/experienced. To find purpose we need to go out and live and we need to listen to our instincts. The soul knows what we are here to do and how to go about doing it and when we have that feeling there is no going back.







