People are searching for answers in all the wrong places. When I teach Life Design or Pre-Retirement courses, attendees secretly want me to tell them what they should do next. However even if I had an answer, it wouldn’t be the right one for them.
Granted when we feel lost and confused, we want a fast answer. I used to believe that if I just had the right information, I could live problem free. I suspected there was one answer that was eluding me. If I read enough books or took enough courses or had enough degrees, I would have the solution. I even found a cartoon in The New Yorker that said: “the point is not finding the right answer, but learning to live without one”. You can imagine I didn’t find that funny.
So what answer are you hoping for? How will it impact your life? Many people get very uncertain around transitions. What’s next often becomes very murky. For example, graduation from college…a leap into the real world. Or retirement…what will I do with my time now? Or the death of a spouse or partner…how do I go on alone?
The emotions raised around these huge questions pressure us for immediate answers. If we could just know what to do now, we’d feel better. But it’s not always about doing something, it’s often about being. Who will we become now in this new chapter? How will we express our values, interests, and talents?
What if we didn’t press for the answer and just spent time in this new space? What if we took time to let go of the prior self and prepare room for the new? It doesn’t help that friends and family often ask, “What will you do now?” They aren’t comfortable either with your change of identity, focus, and purpose. Perhaps we all get anxious around change, the unknown.
Rather than a dark tunnel facing us, what if we viewed this time as an opportunity for investigation, possibility, and curiosity? Unlike the desire for a cookbook to tell us what steps to take, life design is an inside job. You have to figure it out, you have to try it on, you have to make the hard choices. So how do we create a smorgasbord of options when we are in transition?
Imagine a dart board where you place images of activities that interest you. What if you throw the dart and try out whatever it lands on? No commitment, no pressure, just a trial.
Now work is not something you can try on, you say. Work is serious. You can’t take that lightly. What if you could? What if you could explore different careers? We did that when we were younger through internships, volunteering, and summer jobs. What can we make possible now?
Here are some steps to begin:
Luxuriate in the unknown. Dream, free associate
Draw, scribble, use clay to represent what’s coming to mind
Find pictures of people doing what intrigues you
Paste them to a pretend dart board
Throw the dart
Locate someone who does that activity
Interview them
Visit and shadow them as they work or play
Pay attention to your emotions and thoughts. Depending on the results, go deeper or throw the dart again.
Have fun and see you on the path.
“Try to love the questions themselves, like locked rooms and like books written in a foreign language. Do not look for the answers…At present you need to live the question. Perhaps you will gradually, without even noticing it, find yourself experiencing the answer, some distant day…Discipline yourself to attain it, but accept that which comes to you with deep trust…”
Rainer Maria Rilke, Letters to a Young Poet