"Your mission in life," taught the Buddha, "is to find your mission in life and then to give your whole heart and soul to it."
You were beamed to earth, "trailing clouds of glory," for a purpose.
You have something noble and profound to accomplish. None other can take your place.
"Let your light shine," commanded Jesus.
Your unfulfilled mission is a gaping black hole of squandered
potential. Statues will be erected to honor your name when you fulfill
your mission.
The challenge is that finding mission in the first place is usually tougher than actually living mission.
How many times have you asked God in desperation what to do, while
telling Him you'll do whatever He asks if He just shows you the way?
I can't speak for you, but for me His answer is almost always, "You
think I'd make it that easy for you?" spoken with a sly grin and a
hearty chuckle.
Thanks to His calculated evasiveness, I've had to uncover my own clues revealing my mission.
I'm certain that the two greatest clues I've unearthed are universal.
You can know with conviction that you've been shown the path to mission by:
- What upsets and angers you about society.
- What you fear the most.
Fix What Angers You
Reading the backs of cereal boxes chaps my hide.
The bland and insipid clichés make me want to strangle each and every
obtuse member of the bureaucratic corporate committee who had a hand in
castrating the message.
You undoubtedly find it silly that I would even mention something so trivial.
But I'm a writer. I notice things like that. In fact, I can't not notice them. It's tattooed into my DNA. It's my mission to convey meaning, pierce minds, transform hearts.
You can't help but notice and be angered by certain things, too.
Things that other people are clueless about. Things far more important
than cereal box ads.
Go fix them; it's your mission to do so. Leap from the couch. Yank the TV cord from the wall. Flee from Facebook. Go. Fix. Them.
As Michael Strong wrote in Be the Solution: How Entrepreneurs and Conscious Capitalists Can Solve All the World's Problems:
"...we welcome dissatisfaction as the source of craving for
the good. But we never accept whining or criticizing of others or
critiques of society.
"If you don't like it, go fix it, go create a world, a community, a
subculture in which your ideals can be instantiated, realized, in which
you can show us what your vision of beauty and nobility looks like.
"Create a new social reality, so that I can see your dreams come
true. I want to see a world in which billions of dreams are coming true
constantly.
"Criticize by creating."
Trust & Follow Your Fear
In The War of Art: Break Through the Blocks and Win Your Inner Creative Battles, Steven Pressfield writes:
"Are you paralyzed by fear? That's a good sign. Fear is good. Like self-doubt, fear is an indicator.
"Fear tells us what we have to do...The more scared we are of a work or calling, the more sure we can be that we have to do it.
"Resistance is experienced as fear; the degree of fear equates to the
strength of the Resistance. Therefore the more fear we feel about a
specific enterprise, the more certain we can be that that enterprise is
important to us and to the growth of our soul.
"That's why we feel so much Resistance. If it meant nothing to us, there'd be no Resistance."
Seth Godin concurs:
"...if you're afraid of something, of putting yourself out
there, of creating a kind of connection or a promise, that's a clue that
you're on the right track. Go, do that."
What are you desperately afraid of?
I'm not talking about primal fears like snakes and heights.
I'm talking about those intuitions screaming from your soul that you've slammed into a box, locked tightly, buried deeply.
I'm talking about every great idea you've ever had that you've talked
yourself out of because the prospect of failure paralyzed you.
I'm talking about those venomous butterflies swarming in your gut every time you think of doing ____________.
Those fears are a laser pinpointing the exact source and nature of
your mission. They are not the storm; they are the lighthouse.
Set your course to point straight at them. Man your rudder, adjust
your sails. Square your shoulders. Grit your teeth. Strap on a diaper if
necessary.
Bellow "Banzai!" and kamikaze through them.
You won't die. You'll come alive for the first time. The universe will shift. And you will know what you were born to do.
No more armchair criticizing. No more fearful paralysis. No more fumbling in the dark groping for mission.
Follow the clues of what angers you and what scares you. And through
darkness and confusion will burst the brilliant light of mission.