Purpose is often misunderstood.
We tend
to think of it as something large and dramatic, a calling, a mission statement,
a bold declaration of what comes next. For many people in midlife and early
retirement, that expectation alone can feel paralyzing. If purpose has to be
big, public, or life-defining, what happens when all you feel ready for is one
small step?
What
I’ve learned is that purpose rarely arrives fully formed. More often, it begins
quietly, with being present, being heard, and allowing yourself to want more
than you currently have.
During
my time on the board of a local charity, I moved from Director to Vice
President. I would likely have become President as well, but the organization
had a six-year limit on board membership. At first, that rule felt restrictive.
Over time, I came to appreciate it. It kept new ideas flowing and ensured the
charity stayed connected to the changing needs of the community rather than
becoming comfortable or insular.
What
surprised me most was how long it took to truly find my voice.
It was
about a year and a half before I realized that people weren’t just being polite
when I spoke, they were listening. I’ve never been shy, and I’ve never been
afraid to share my thoughts. But this was different. I wasn’t just reacting or
offering opinions. My vision of what could happen had expanded, and I began to
work deliberately on ideas that mattered to me and to the organization.
Those
were small steps. Conversations. Suggestions. Follow-through. But together,
they created something larger, a growing sense of purpose about who I was
becoming as I moved through the stages of retirement.
That
sense of purpose didn’t replace my former work identity overnight. In fact,
when people first retire, it’s very common and very comforting to cling to the
past. I know people who, long after retirement, still visit their old workplace
just to chat with former colleagues. There’s nothing wrong with staying
connected to people you care about. The risk comes when that connection becomes
the only place you feel relevant or valued.
If
your sense of purpose lives entirely in the past, it leaves very little room
for the future.
A new
purpose gives you a reason to get up in the morning and face the day, not out
of obligation, but out of interest and engagement. Purpose doesn’t mean staying
busy for the sake of it. It means feeling that what you do, however modest,
still matters to someone, including yourself.
Purpose
also requires permission.
Permission
to be visible again in a different way. Permission to speak, to contribute, to
imagine. And perhaps most importantly, permission to want more, not more status
or more pressure, but more meaning, more connection, more life.
As I
said in the previous post, we can resist change, resign ourselves to it, or
embrace it. Embracing change doesn’t mean chasing a new career or signing up
for every opportunity that comes along. It means listening for what stirs your
curiosity now, at this stage of life, and trusting that it’s worth paying
attention to.
Moving
forward often means finding a new mission, but missions don’t have to be
permanent or grand. They can be seasonal. They can evolve. They can begin with
something as simple as showing up, speaking up, and noticing where you feel
most alive.
In the
next post, I’ll talk about practical ways to start again, especially if you
feel stuck. You don’t need to burn everything down to make a meaningful change.
Sometimes, starting again means starting exactly where you are.