avatarAyodeji Awosika

Summary

This article explores five thought-provoking questions to help readers discover their true desires in life and overcome personal limitations.

Abstract

The article, titled "5 Questions You Can Use to Help Figure Out What You Really Want From Life," presents five introspective questions aimed at helping individuals uncover their true desires and aspirations. The questions are designed to challenge readers' perspectives, encourage self-reflection, and inspire them to take action towards achieving their goals. The author suggests that by examining their lives and questioning their reality, people can gain a deeper understanding of themselves and make more informed decisions about their future.

Opinions

  • The author emphasizes the importance of asking oneself "why?" multiple times to uncover the root cause of personal struggles or desires.
  • The author encourages readers to think about how they can achieve their 10-year goals in just 6 months, challenging them to reconsider their self-imposed limitations and timeframes.
  • The author suggests that people often limit themselves and sell themselves short by expanding their timeframes too long, preventing them from taking action and achieving their goals.
  • The author poses the question, "What are you afraid of realizing about yourself?" to prompt readers to confront their fears and insecurities.
  • The author challenges readers to consider what they would do if they weren't afraid to fail, encouraging them to embrace bravery and vulnerability in the pursuit of their dreams.
  • The author suggests that people should adopt a "Why not you?" attitude when pursuing their goals, emphasizing the importance of taking risks and embracing uncertainty.
  • The author encourages readers to separate their identity from their work, offering a solution to the fear of failure and the attachment of one's self-worth to the outcomes of their work.
Photo by Brett Jordan on Unsplash

5 Questions You Can Use to Help Figure Out What You Really Want From Life

What are you afraid of realizing about yourself?

The questions you ask yourself to determine the answers you get. The answers you get determine the decisions you make. The decisions you make combined with the circumstances you start from creating the life you have now.

As Socrates said: “The unexamined life is not worth living.”

So, examine your life. Don’t just let life happen to you. Question your reality and use the answers to guide you. If you can’t come up with any questions yourself, here are some to get you started.

Ask Yourself the Same Question 5 Times in a Row

Whenever you try to sell somebody something, they’re usually going to throw an objection at you:

‘I don’t have enough money,’ ‘I don’t have time to use this, ‘now’s not a good time’, etc. But usually, the truth lies behind the initial objection. Either they don’t trust you, they don’t trust the product, or they do trust the product but don’t trust themselves to follow through with using it.

Good salespeople get to the root objection and offer a solution to it if they can. You can use a question to go through a similar process when unearthing your own problems. Whenever you’re struggling with something, or even when you think you want something, ask yourself why?

I was always afraid to take the next step in my business and start creating programs. Why? Because I wasn’t sure if I could deliver on my promises and I didn’t want to become a sleazy course salesman. Why? Because I didn’t want to ruin my reputation. Why? Because I care about my reputation?

Why?

Because ultimately I’ve attached my identity to the results of my work.

A failure in business makes me feel like a failure as a person. I created a solution by consciously separating my identity from my work, offering a generous no-hassle refund policy, and creating the best programs possible.

When you’re struggling with something in your life, drill down to the root cause. Often, you’ll find a similar answer. Most of your hesitation in life comes from attaching your identity to the outcomes that happen in your life.

How Can You Achieve Your 10-Year Goal In 6 Months?

This is a question from Peter Thiel to get you to stretch your thinking and understand where you’re hedging and playing it safe instead of just going for it. There’s a heuristic called Parkinson’s Law that says you’ll fit a task or a goal into the timeframe you give it.

Most of us continue to kick the can down the road. I’ve done it many times. It took me five years to quit my full-time job. Looking back on everything that went down, I probably could’ve done it in two or three years.

I lived by a rule called the 5-Year Rule. So many people told me that was how long it took for success that it became my destiny.

Now, don’t get me wrong, getting your freedom, and living your dreams in five years is awesome. And you can also fail by trying to do too much too soon. But this question is a great exercise in thinking because it shows you how much you limit yourself.

If you actually started to brainstorm and plot out how to pull off a goal in a shorter period of time, you’d come up with a bunch of amazing ideas that might not literally cut your time frame in 1/12th, but it can and will give you some ideas to move forward more efficiently.

Think about how much you sell yourself short, limit yourself, and expand your timeframes so long that you’ll probably never get anything done. Try this exercise and use the answers to create a plan you can use right now.

What Are You Afraid of Realizing About Yourself?

For me, it’s that I’m predominantly driven by insecurity veiled as ambition. The issues I write about are issues I’m addressing and working to fix for myself. I think any self-improvement writer would admit that if they were being honest.

I’m afraid that I’m constantly going to chase the dragon and try to fill the void, only to die with everything I’ve ever wanted in a material sense but still feeling that void. I’m afraid that I’m not okay as I am right now, in stasis, without having to ‘achieve something.’

But I’m going through the process of separating the wheat and the chaff when it comes to my own life and I’m inviting you to do the same. I openly admit that I have no perfect answer and only make suggestions without any guarantees or promises.

With that, I turn the question to you (in fact, leave it in the comments if you are bold):

What are you afraid of realizing about yourself?

What are you hiding from? What’s blocking you from coming to fully realize yourself? How are you lying to yourself and why?

What Would You Do If You Weren’t Afraid to Fail?

Sure, ambition can be hollow and driven by insecurity. But ‘contentment’ and ‘security’ can be driven by apathy. And that apathy is ultimately derived from fear.

Say what you want about self-improvement and it’s hyperbole, but we live in a society of terrified people. What are they afraid of? Here’s a thought from one of my favorite thinkers:

“We’re all going to die, all of us, what a circus! That alone should make us love each other but it doesn’t. We are terrorized and flattened by trivialities, we are eaten up by nothing.” — Charles Bukowski

We spend our entire lives wasting time with trivial BS because we’re afraid of facing life head-on, chest out, shoulders wide, brave yet vulnerable.

What would you do if you weren’t afraid to fail? If it’s not close to what you’re doing right now then you know it’s time to stop BSing yourself. Sure, you have bills, health insurance, and your kid’s college fund, but you have an abundance of free time to do the things that scare you.

At least, you think you have an abundance.

The Yoga teacher I’ve studied with for the past six years suddenly died. She was in perfect health. During Shavasana's pose, at the end where you lie down and relax, she’d always read a quote, many of which talked about surrendering to the present moment so that you could overcome your fear of failure.

She took a dream and a Yoga mat and turned it into an empire of her own. I’m sure she made a ton of money from the channel, but you could tell she just loved to do what she did. She had to overcome her fears to do that, and for overcoming her fears she got to lay to rest knowing she was the person she was meant to become.

That’s the goal. Not money. Not fame. Bravery.

Why Not You?

I’ve finished some of these online programs that teach you skills like how to make money blogging, self-publishing books, starting businesses, etc. I pulled it all off and live my dream.

I can’t explain the exact underlying mechanism of how I got motivated, but I just sort of asked myself:

Why the hell not dude? Some people pull it off. Why not you?

And I just held onto that feeling. I held onto it when I launched my first product that sold zero sales. I held onto it when I barely made a dime for my first couple of years of writing. The alternative looked worse to me — stuck in a cube having to listen to people I didn’t want to fucking listen to.

So I weighed my options and chose ‘Why not?”

A lot of these questions are just different little derivatives to help you deal with your fear. The fear you feel because you tie everything so close to your identity, so close to your ego. Your ego tells you all the reasons why you shouldn’t do something. Counteract it with ‘Why the hell not?”

And the underlying attitude of a phrase like that is the key to propelling yourself forward. You’re serious about your goals, but at the same time you’re just like ‘screw it.’

What’s the point of being so serious, so timid, so stuck in a state of pragmatism that’s really nothing more than a failure to understand that you’re a speck of cosmic dust and that it’s insane you’re even here in the first place.

So, why not?

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Life
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