Without exaggerating in the slightest, I can honestly
say that in the last year I have come across hundreds of articles that
encourage the reader to ‘follow their dreams’. I myself am guilty of writing
pieces of a similar nature. After all it’s good advice, isn’t it? It’s far
better to aim for what your heart really desires than convince yourself that it
will never happen and live a less fulfilled life as a result. These articles
are supposed to make you act; first by deciding what your dream life is, and then
by devising a set of goals designed to help you reach that dream life, if only
in teeny tiny baby steps.
While at first glance this all sounds great, I am starting
to take umbrage with the entire idea of ‘dream life’, as it implies that the
life you’re currently living isn’t good enough as it is, and is simply a
waiting room for the life you want to be living.
Too often these articles ask the question: ‘are you
stuck in a nine to five job?’ knowing that the answer to that for the majority
of people will be a resounding yes. They then go on to argue that now is the
time to start living your life, and to do so you should quit your job and open
up the coffee shop you’ve always wanted/become a sky-diving instructor/make
money by telling people how to live their best life. Now if that is what you
want to do, go for it. However, my issue with
this advice is that having an occupation that isn’t in the field you want, or
simply isn’t everything your heart desires, does not mean that you are not
living a fulfilled life. It doesn’t even mean that you are not living your
dream life. These articles give the impression that we should not be happy, fulfilled
or feel that we have ‘made it’ unless every single card has fallen into place.
That is not to say that dreams and goals are not
important, because it’s great to have things to aim for. I for one am probably
the most goal-orientated person on Earth, and would probably spend all day
sitting in a park with a book if I didn’t have a check list of things I wanted
to get done every single day (like writing this article for instance).
Nevertheless, the problem with goals, particularly if you are not happy, is
that they can become a sort of life raft. You base the happiness that you may
not be feeling right now on that goal, thinking that think once you reach it
you can finally settle down and appreciate the here and now. However, no matter
who you are and no matter how lucky you are, nothing will ever be perfect. There
will always be additional goals and things that you are dreaming of that may
not have yet happened, and may not ever happen. So for every dream or goal that
you do fulfil, there will be thousands more waiting in the background, giving
you a reason to feel unfulfilled in your current situation.
To put things in perspective a bit, eighty percent of
people live on less than ten US dollars a day and 1.3 billion do not have
enough to eat. If you think about that and then look around you – at the roof
over your head, the food in your cupboard, the security of that boring office
job – then it is quite easy to see that you are already living a dream life.
You don’t need to wait for every single thing to be going exactly the way you
want it to before you can stop and appreciate how lucky you are.
So despite the so-called positivity and motivation of
these ‘follow your heart and live your dream life’ articles, goals and dreams
aren’t what are really needed right now for many of us. Rather, we need to
foster gratitude for our current situation, and the dream life that we
currently have ownership of. It’s okay to have dreams – in fact, I highly
encourage it. However don’t let those dreams stop you from enjoying the here
and now. There needs to be far less articles that advise how to get from point
A to point B in order to be happy, and more articles on how to be happy right now
in the life that we are already living.
(Image credit: 1.)
Comments
There are several phrases I really don't like - "change!" "hope!" "Follow your dreams!" "it's the journey that counts" (really, journey/path as a metaphor for life)...just because they don't really mean anything. They're empty enough that people fill them with their own meaning.
Great post!
Reminds me of a quote from Midnight in Paris: "Adriana, if you stay here though, and this becomes your present then pretty soon you'll start imagining another time was really your... You know, was really the golden time. Yeah, that's what the present is. It's a little unsatisfying because life's a little unsatisfying. "
I'm also trying to practice gratitude :)
and very realistic too.
I'm a dreamer
but I also enjoy the little things I have now.