shuttle_bus5
Active Member
An insightful post.Most likely though if you don’t believe you have a purpose, then you probably won’t believe what about to say anyway,
It is a paradox of our modern age that, although we have more knowledge and material possessions than at any other time in history, we sense a lack of purpose in life. A gnawing hunger for the meaning of life pervades our world.
Because we are so dissatisfied with our life, our life is so empty, so tawdry, so monotonous, doing the same thing over and over again, we want something more, something beyond that which we are doing. Since our everyday life is so empty, so dull, so meaningless, so boring, so intolerably stupid, we say life must have a fuller meaning and that is why you ask this question. Surely a man who is living richly, a man who sees things as they are and is content with what he has, is not confused; he is clear, therefore he does not ask what is the purpose of life. For him the very living is the beginning and the end. Our difficulty is that, since our life is empty, we want to find a purpose to life and strive for it.
Such a purpose of life can only be mere intellection, without any reality; when the purpose of life is pursued by a stupid, dull mind, by an empty heart, that purpose will also be empty. Therefore our purpose is how to make our life rich, not with money and all the rest of it but inwardly rich-which is not something cryptic.
I think your definition of our lives as empty and tawdry and a search for fuller meaning is ultimately an outcome of society. The idea of material possessions (as you mentioned) and a hedonistic society, i think plays a big role in most people feeling empty and searching for more. We see someone with a new car, so we also want a new car. It is part of the human condition that we desire what we don't have.
This ultimate search for something bigger is often fulfilled by religion. In my opinion, Religion is a false reality for the victims of our hedonistic society. It offers shallows answers to lifes questions and the promise of an afterlife and most people are more then happy to accept a shallow way of fulfilling their emptiness.
I am not searching for a meaning/purpose therefore I do not need religion in my life.
I see no purpose to my life because i am content with what i have. I do not desire wealth or fortune because i am simply happy with my minimalist life style. I am content with my everyday activities.
Perhaps desire is our purpose?
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