How to Find Your Purpose
in Life
Are you struggling to discover your purpose? That may be because you
feel isolated from other people. Here's how you can overcome that.
Do you
have a sense of purpose?
For
decades, psychologists have studied how long-term, meaningful goals develop
over the span of our lives. The goals that foster a sense of purpose are ones
that can potentially change the lives of other people, like launching an
organization, researching disease, or teaching kids to read.
Indeed, a
sense of purpose appears to have evolved in humans so that we can accomplish
big things together—which may be why it’s linked to better physical and mental health. Purpose is adaptive, in an
evolutionary sense. It helps both
individuals and the species to survive.
Many seem
to believe that purpose arises from your special gifts and sets you apart from
other people—but that’s only part of the truth. It also grows from our
connection to others, which is why a crisis of purpose is often a symptom of
isolation. Once you find your path, you’ll almost certainly find others
traveling along with you, hoping to reach the same destination—a community.
Here are
six ways to overcome isolation and discover your purpose in life.
1. Read
Reading
connects us to people we’ll never know, across time and space—an experience
that research says is linked to a sense of meaning and purpose. (Note:
“Meaning” and “purpose” are linked but separate social-scientific constructs.
Purpose is a part of meaning; meaning is a much broader concept that usually
also includes value, efficacy, and self-worth.)
In
a 2010 paper, for example, Leslie Francis studied a group of
nearly 26,000 teenagers throughout England and Wales—and found that those who
read the Bible more tended to have a stronger sense of purpose. Secular reading
seems to make a difference, as well. In a survey of empirical studies, Raymond A. Mar and colleagues
found a link between reading poetry and fiction and a sense of purpose among
adolescents.
“Reading
fiction might allow adolescents to reason about the whole lives of characters,
giving them specific insight into an entire lifespan without having to have
fully lived most of their own lives,” they suggest. By seeing purpose in the
lives of other people, teens are more likely to see it in their own lives. In
this sense, purpose is an act of the imagination.
Many
people I interviewed for this article mentioned pivotal books or ideas they
found in books.
The
writing of historian W.E.B. Du Bois pushed
social-justice activist Art McGee to embrace a specific vision of
African-American identity and liberation. Journalist Michael Stoll found
inspiration in the “social responsibility theory of journalism,” which he read
about at Stanford University. “Basically, reporters and editors have not just
the ability but also the duty to improve their community by being independent
arbiters of problems that need solving,” he says. “It’s been my professional
North Star ever since.” Spurred by this idea, Michael went on to launch an
award-winning nonprofit news agency called The San
Francisco Public Press.
So, if
you’re feeling a crisis of purpose in your life, go to the bookstore or library
or university. Find books that matter to you—and they might help you to see
what matters in your own life.
2. Turn hurts into healing for
others
Of
course, finding purpose is not just an intellectual pursuit; it’s something we
need to feel. That’s why it can grow out of suffering, both our own and
others’.
Kezia
Willingham was raised in poverty in Corvallis, Oregon, her family riven by
domestic violence. “No one at school intervened or helped or supported my
mother, myself, or my brother when I was growing up poor, ashamed, and sure
that my existence was a mistake,” she says. “I was running the streets,
skipping school, having sex with strangers, and abusing every drug I could get
my hands on.”
When she
was 16, Kezia enrolled at an alternative high school that “led me to believe I
had options and a path out of poverty.” She made her way to college and was
especially “drawn to the kids with ‘issues’”—kids like the one she had once
been. She says:
I want the kids out there who
grew up like me, to know they have futures ahead of them. I want them to know
they are smart, even if they may not meet state academic standards. I want them
to know that they are just as good and valuable as any other human who happens
to be born into more privileged circumstances. Because they are. And there are
so damn many messages telling them otherwise.
Sometimes,
another person’s pain can lead us to purpose. When Christopher Pepper was a
senior in high school, a “trembling, tearful friend” told him that she had been
raped by a classmate. “I comforted as well as I could, and left that
conversation vowing that I would do something to keep this from happening to
others,” says Christopher. He kept that promise by becoming a Peer Rape
Educator in college—and then a sex educator in San Francisco public schools.
Why do
people like Kezia and Christopher seem to find purpose in suffering—while
others are crushed by it? Part of the answer, as we’ll see next, might have to
do with the emotions and behaviors we cultivate in ourselves.
3. Cultivate awe, gratitude, and
altruism
Certain emotions and behaviors that promote health and well-being can also
foster a sense of purpose—specifically, awe, gratitude, and altruism.
Several studies conducted by the Greater Good Science
Center’s Dacher Keltner have shown that the experience of awe makes usfeel connected to something larger than ourselves—and so can
provide the emotional foundation for a sense of purpose.
Of
course, awe all by itself won’t give you a purpose in life. It’s not enough to
just feel like you’re a small part of something big; you also need to feel
driven to make a positive impact on the world. That’s where gratitude and
generosity come into play.
“It may
seem counterintuitive to foster purpose by cultivating a grateful mindset, but
it works,” writes psychologist Kendall Bronk, a leading expert
on purpose. As research by William Damon, Robert Emmons, and others has found,
children and adults who are able to count their blessings are much more likely
to try to “contribute to the world beyond themselves.” This is probably
because, if we can see how others make our world a better place, we’ll be more
motivated to give something back.
Here we
arrive at altruism. There’s little question, at this point, that helping others is associated with a meaningful, purposeful
life. In one study, for example, Daryl Van Tongeren and colleagues
found that people who engage in more altruistic behaviors, like volunteering or
donating money, tend to have a greater sense of purpose in their lives.
Interestingly,
gratitude and altruism seem to work together to generate meaning and purpose.
In a second experiment, the researchers randomly assigned some participants to
write letters of gratitude—and those people later reported a stronger sense of
purpose. More recent work by Christina Karns and colleagues found that
altruism and gratitude are neurologically linked, activating the same reward
circuits in the brain.
4. Listen to what other people
appreciate about you
Giving
thanks can help you find your purpose. But you can also find purpose in what
people thank you for.
Like
Kezia Willingham, Shawn Taylor had a tough childhood—and he was also drawn
to working with kids who had severe behavioral problems. Unlike her, however,
he often felt like the work was a dead-end. “I thought I sucked at my chosen
profession,” he says. Then, one day, a girl he’d worked with five years before
contacted him.
“She
detailed how I helped to change her life,” says Shawn—and she asked him to walk
her down the aisle when she got married. Shawn hadn’t even thought about her,
in all that time. “Something clicked and I knew this was my path. No specifics,
but youth work was my purpose.”
The
artists, writers, and musicians I interviewed often described how appreciation
from others fueled their work. Dani Burlison never
lacked a sense of purpose, and she toiled for years as a writer and
social-justice activist in Santa Rosa, California. But when wildfires swept
through her community, Dani discovered that her strengths were needed in a new
way: “I’ve found that my networking and emergency response skills have been
really helpful to my community, my students, and to firefighters!”
Although
there is no research that directly explores how being thanked might fuel a
sense of purpose, we do know that gratitude strengthens relationships—and those are often the source
of our purpose, as many of these stories suggest.
5. Find and build community
As we see
in Dani’s case, we can often find our sense of purpose in the people around us.
Many
people told me about finding purpose in family. In tandem with his reading, Art
McGee found purpose—working for social and racial justice—in “love and respect
for my hardworking father,” he says. “Working people like him deserved so much
better.”
Environmental
and social-justice organizer Jodi Sugerman-Brozan feels driven “to leave the
world in a better place than I found it.” Becoming a mom “strengthened that
purpose (it’s going to be their world, and their kids’ world),” she says. It
“definitely influences how I parent (wanting to raise anti-racist, feminist,
radical kids who will want to continue the fight and be leaders).”
Of
course, our kids may not embrace our purpose. Amber Cantorna was raised by
purpose-driven parents who were right-wing Christians. “My mom had us involved
in stuff all the time, all within that conservative Christian bubble,” she
says. This family and community fueled a strong sense of purpose in Amber: “To
be a good Christian and role model. To be a blessing to other people.”
The
trouble is that this underlying purpose involved making other people more like
them. When she came out as a lesbian at age 27, Amber’s family and community
swiftly and suddenly cast her out. This triggered a deep crisis of purpose—one
that she resolved by finding a new faith community “that helped shape me and
gave me a sense of belonging,” she says.
Often,
the nobility of our purpose reflects the company we keep. The purpose that came
from Amber’s parents was based on exclusion, as she discovered. There was no
place—and no purpose—for her in that community once she embraced an identity
they couldn’t accept. A new sense of purpose came with the new community and
identity she helped to build, of gay and lesbian Christians.
If you’re
having trouble remembering your purpose, take a look at the people around you.
What do you have in common with them? What are they trying to be? What impact
do you see them having on the world? Is that impact a positive one? Can you
join with them in making that impact? What do they need? Can you give it them?
If the
answers to those questions don’t inspire you, then you might need to find a new
community—and with that, a new purpose may come.
6. Tell your story
Reading
can help you find your purpose—but so can writing,
Purpose
often arises from curiosity about your own life. What obstacles have you encountered?
What strengths helped you to overcome them? How did other people help you? How
did your strengths help make life better for others?
“We all
have the ability to make a narrative out of our own lives,” says Emily Esfahani Smith, author of the 2017 book The Power of
Meaning. “It
gives us clarity on our own lives, how to understand ourselves, and gives us a
framework that goes beyond the day-to-day and basically helps us make sense of
our experiences.”
That’s
why Amber Cantorna wrote her memoir, Refocusing My
Family: Coming Out, Being Cast Out, and Discovering the True Love of God. At first depressed after losing
everyone she loved, Amber soon discovered new strengths in herself—and she is
using her book to help build a nonprofit organization called Beyond to
support gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender Christians in their coming-out
process.
One 2008 study found that those who see meaning and purpose
in their lives are able to tell a story of change and growth, where they managed to
overcome the obstacles they encountered. In other words, creating a narrative like Amber’s can help us to
see our own strengths and how applying those strengths can make a difference in
the world, which increases our sense of self-efficacy.
This is a
valuable reflective process to all people, but Amber took it one step further,
by publishing her autobiography and turning it into a tool for social change.
Today, Amber’s purpose is to help people like her feel less alone.
“My sense
of purpose has grown a lot with my desire to share my story—and the realization
that so many other people have shared my journey.”
BY JEREMY ADAM SMITH
https://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/how_to_find_your_purpose_in_life?utm_source=Greater+Good+Science+Center&utm_campaign=af86f43b2c-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_GG_Newsletter_Jan+10+2018&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_5ae73e326e-af86f43b2c-51482775
No comments:
Post a Comment