Thanalis: So... turned 35 years old and not much to show for it. How many people have made it past this point and have come to terms with how it will end up?
You sound a little down there.
I would encourage you to reflect on the good things you have done in life already. Think about the little things that add up and really are important, very important. I am talking about the times when you were kind to someone in some small way, maybe just in passing. Sometimes, you can do something like that and never know how much it meant to that person.
Make things like that happen. You don't need to do anything earth shattering to be able to feel that your life is meaningful, has purpose and that you can feel good about yourself.
Be mindful of how very important it is to live in the moment. Yesterday is gone now. There is just right now and looking ahead hopefully many days to come. This is the place where hope lives.
Consider your talents and how you might apply them in work that is meaningful to you. I am not talking about a career change. We all have bills to pay and maybe your current job suits you just fine but there is more work you could be doing if you want to take it on in pursuit of goals and accomplishments that are meaningful to you.
Have you ever thought about trying out any sort of volunteer work? It doesn't have to be a big thing, a big time commitment but can just be a small one to test the waters of doing that in some way. Maybe there is some talent or talents that you could share with others to help them or perhaps entertain them in some way. Just as one simple example, you could go to a local nursing home and tell the receptionist, "I'd like to volunteer to help the residents here somehow." If you don't already know how I am sure somebody there can tell you. It means so much to an old person who may not have family to visit, who may be confused and have nobody to ever come call on them, just to drop in and say hi, ask them how they are doing, strike up any conversation. Ask them to tell you stories. This is not hard. It's as easy as saying, "Tell me a story. i bet you have a lot of them." We can learn so much from our elders. They have seen so much in a lifetime.
I'll stop there on that one but it is just a single idea off the top of my head because I once worked as a nurse for a long time before I wound changing careers and getting into software development.
I guess the thing I want most to tell you and encourage you to do is rather than look backwards too much, look at now and look ahead and think about what you would like to do that would be good and make you feel good.
Think about this and set one achievable goal for yourself to do something that you'd feel good about doing.
Some good things, including ones we feel proud of happen on their own somehow in the course of life. However, I think more times things like this happen when we chart a course for ourselves with clearly defined and achievable goals that we then pursue in earnest.
I cannot say enough about the incredible sense of satisfaction that comes when one chooses to do things for other people. Being a nurse was hard and it did not pay me anything near what I made in software but you know what? It was the best job I ever had. It was the most meaningful job I ever had. Of course, I didn't do anything huge. I didn't change the world but I did change some worlds a little, one suffering, scared, lonely human being at a time. They would be so grateful for my story telling, my jokes, my genuine affection for them, my interest in them and their lives as if I was some sort of saint but I wasn't and I am not. I did love them though. I can honestly say that I loved them, even the tough ones, like they were my own. I always told the nurses aids if you want to be really good at this it's easy. Every time you walk into a room, do it like you are walking into the room of a loved family member and then act accordingly. You will never fail this way.
In the end, I feel so good about my decade as a nurse because of how i loved them, they knew it and it made their lives just a little bit better. I will never do anything more rewarding than that for the rest of my life but I will always be grateful that once upon a time I was a nurse and I was proud to be one.
So, you see it wasn't about making money. It wasn't about status or having stuff. It was not about accomplishing big and great things at all. It was about how special it was when two old ladies frozen with paralysis by MS would be so happy to see me coming and if I was running late, they would ask the nurse's aides where I was because they wanted their bedtime story. They gave me so much I don't know how to even put it into words. I did simple things for them but they did something huge for me. I will never forget them for the rest of my life and how they made me feel so special for doing such a simple little thing for them. I have so many stories like that. I remember so many special people who touched my soul.
That's what helping others is all about and the amazing thing is how much we help ourselves doing it and how good it makes us feel.
You don't have to make a career of it though. You can instead think about this. Think about where you could work with and for other people. I guarantee you in the end you will always somehow seem to get more than you gave. Everybody wins. When you are 50, you won't be making a post like you did here someplace. Instead, you may find yourself responding to one by somebody else as I am to you.
You have the power to determine your future, so do it. Be satisfied. Make it happen. it's up to you but it isn't going to come to you. You need to go and get it. I believe absolutely that you can because of what you posted. You know why? Because this mattered enough to you to do that. You don't feel satisfied but that is a problem you can decide to start fixing right now.
I have been disabled for over ten years now and it is permanent but I don't feel badly or sorry for myself. A lot of bad stuff has happened to me but it doesn't merit going on about here. What is important is that rather than focus on that I deliberately choose to focus instead on good things I accomplished and still intend to accomplish for the rest of the ride.
You know that stuff about the nursing home volunteering? I'll tell you where that came from. I have recently decided that I am going to do that. I might be disabled but I can do that. It will be good therapy for me and for the folks I visit both. Everybody wins. You can too. I hope you'll do more than think this all sounds pretty good and actually go to the next step of acting on it. You will never regret the day you decided to go out make a difference for someone.
By the way, if the ideas I mention don't work for you that is okay. We are all different. Try using your favorite search engine to search on the term volunteer with your town added. That should turn up some stuff to give you ideas. You could also check with local churches for ideas to become involved somehow in your community. You don't need to be a church goer yourself to go offer to help people in some way. Just tell them, your on a mission to find something meaningful to do besides the stuff you already do to get by, etc.
Just one last important thing, just in case. If you find yourself feeling down for an extended period of time don't ignore that or blame your current place in life for it without any way of being certain that is really the case. Call a local therapist and go talk about it if feelings of melancholy persist if you are having them. You don't need to answer to any of this. This is just FYI. Just keep this in mind. Depression if you did have it is a serious physiologically based disorder that can be helped. It is not a sign of weakness. It does not mean somebody is crazy. It is no different than any other illness in that it too is an illness and one that should be treated so someone can have a better life. Again, don't bother justifying or explaining anything for me or anybody else here. Just please keep that info in mind in case you don't feel well and it doesn't subside on its own.
I hope you find this helpful and wish you the best in making good things happen that you can later reflect on and feel good about.