Category: Unpolished Wisdom

  • Why Is Nothing Fun Anymore?

    Joy used to be loud. Now it barely whispers.

    I think about what it means to sit in that silence and wonder if the color will ever come back.

    There was a time when the idea of a Saturday night meant possibility.

    A movie could feel like magic. A walk, like therapy. Even a simple coffee with a friend carried some strange kind of electricity.

    Now?

    Most things feel muted, like the color’s been drained out. The music still plays, but I don’t feel it.

    I scroll past things I once cared about. I say “maybe later” way too often.

    I’ve been asking myself this question more than I want to admit:

    Why is nothing fun anymore?

    And while I don’t have all the answers, I do have the quiet evidence of lived experience.

    That of trying, failing, feeling numb, laughing at a meme or a joke I forgot a few seconds later, wondering where the joy went.

    Some possibilities I’ve pondered:

    Burnout wears disguises. It’s not always about being too busy. Sometimes it’s just the dull ache of repetition—wake, work, sleep, repeat.

    Healing takes energy. I’ve been through things—loss, disappointment, heartbreak.

    Sometimes I forget that recovering burns the same fuel spent on fun.

    Fun has changed its shape. Joy used to look like nights on the town or spontaneous adventures, and now it’s… silence.

    Or doing absolutely nothing. Guilt free hopefully.

    Comparison is robbery. Watching everyone else’s highlight reel when mine feels so underwhelming, is a thief of joy if there ever was one.

    Honestly, Im still struggling to fix it.

    I’ve tried the “self-care” stuff. I’ve tried forcing myself to go out, to “have fun,” like fun is something I can summon at will.

    I’ve even pretended to enjoy things, thinking maybe if I smiled enough, the joy would come back.

    It didn’t. Not really.

    I wake up some days and everything feels like a rerun of a show I didn’t like in the first place.

    People talk, I nod. I laugh. But it feels like muscle memory more than authentic participation.

    And the worst part is, I remember what joy used to feel like.

    I remember me, before all this. And I miss that version.

    But I’m here. Still asking the question. Still searching for a flicker of something real.

    Maybe you’re like minded. If your world’s gone a little gray lately, you’re not alone, and you’re not broken.

    Even if nothing feels fun right now, that doesn’t mean it’ll feel this way forever.

    It’s not easy, but we have a place of strength deep within. It’s there, waiting.

    Go there. Be there. Recharge. Regroup.

    Emerge, better than before.

    It’s darkest just before dawn.The sun will shine again. It always does.

    I have to believe that. Even when it seems I don’t.

  • Why Are We Here? A Simple Reflection

    Is there a universal purpose to life? Philosophers, seekers, and mystics have asked this for centuries. While answers differ, some themes repeat across traditions:

    1. Growth: Life can be seen as a classroom for the soul. Every joy and struggle teaches us, shaping us into something wiser. The challenges we face often feel unfair or senseless in the moment, but over time they reveal themselves as teachers. Growth is rarely comfortable, but it is almost always transformative.
    2. Unity: Mystics remind us that separation is an illusion. Beneath differences in culture, belief, and circumstance, we are connected—threads of one fabric, sparks of one flame. When we forget this, we feel isolated and divided. When we remember, even for a moment, compassion flows naturally, and the world feels less heavy.
    3. Love: Love often emerges as life’s deepest calling. Beyond romance, it is compassion, kindness, and connection that bring life meaning. Love is what makes us human. It is what bridges the distance between souls and softens the hardest of days. To love is to affirm that life, even in its pain, is worth living.
    4. Creation: The universe is a great act of becoming. We carry that forward through art, ideas, care, and the lives we influence. Creation does not always look like painting a masterpiece or writing a book—it can be as simple as building trust, nurturing a friendship, or planting a seed in the earth. To create is to leave a trace of ourselves behind, however small, that ripples outward.
    5. The Search: Perhaps the search itself is the purpose. Asking, wondering, and reaching for meaning is not a distraction—it’s the essence of being human. Our questions are as important as our answers. The act of seeking reminds us that we are alive, curious, and engaged with the mystery around us.

    Taken together, these ideas suggest a simple truth: life’s purpose may not be a single answer written in stone, but a path woven from many threads. To grow. To love. To create. To remember our unity. To keep seeking. In living these out, we shape a life that feels meaningful, even in the face of uncertainty.

    And maybe that is the point: not to solve the mystery of existence, but to live inside it fully—awake, connected, and unafraid to wonder.

    As Allen Watts said: “The meaning of life is just to be alive.” 

    If we carry this wisdom daily, how much easier could this road we travel become? How much stress could be relieved? Great minds are busy even as you read these words. They seek to find the meaning to life, of our existence, our purpose, and we await their conclusions. Greater minds than mine certainly, and thus far, they have theories, and that’s something for sure. But the answer? For that we continue waiting, and pondering. 

    As I age I find myself desirous to simply exist. To find true joy in being a part of the working universe. However it started, however we as human beings, with awareness and consciousness came to be, we are here. We are alive, so maybe the answer is to just live. 

    I’ve heard the saying “you only die once.” I understand the intended meaning, but when I heard the rebuttal that says “you only live once, and then you die” I was taken aback. It struck me as a more truthful statement. To live our lives while we are here seems the obvious choice. Death will come, so take every moment as the cherished gift that it is. Go, and be you, be the unique individual existing on this rock, perfectly placed among the vast and expansive universe. We exist!

  • The Weight of Our Own Gaze

    • We are often our own harshest critics, especially as we grow older and notice changes in ourselves. This post reflects on why self-judgment takes hold, how it distorts the way we see ourselves, and what might happen if we learned to meet our reflection with more gentleness.
    • We are, it seems, the only creatures who stand before a mirror and argue with our reflection.
    • A bird may tilt its head curiously at its own image. A lion might not recognize itself at all. But we—humans—measure, critique, and dissect. We grow older and call it decline. We mistake change for loss.
    • Why are we so unkind to ourselves?
    • Part of it may be survival—an ancient instinct to belong, to ensure others find us acceptable. Yet somewhere along the way, the instinct hardened into tyranny. We became judges of our own being, harsher than any jury the world could summon.
    • I find this especially true with age. Lines appear, hair thins, bodies shift. And instead of seeing these changes as natural inscriptions of time, we see them as failures. We imagine others notice them as sharply as we do. We fear we are not seen as we wish to be seen.
    • But perhaps the problem is not the mirror, nor the eyes of others, but the gaze we turn upon ourselves.
    • What if self-judgment is less about truth and more about perception?
    • What if the harsh voice within is not a guardian of reality, but a distortion—a poor translator of our own worth?
    • To loosen its grip, I believe we must practice philosophy in the most practical sense: to question.
    • When the critic speaks, we ask: Is this fact, or only fear?
    • When comparison rises, we remind ourselves: The lives we measure against are illusions too—curated fragments, not truths.
    • When age unsettles us, we might whisper: This is not loss, but becoming. Change is not failure; it is the law of all things.
    • The world does not wait at the edge of its seat to judge us. Most people, if they see us at all, see only in passing. The harsher gaze is our own. And so the work is not to change our faces, our bodies, our years—but to change the way we behold them.
    • Perhaps the task is not to silence self-judgment completely—perhaps that is impossible—but to soften it, to recognize it for what it is: a voice, not a verdict.
    • And in that recognition, there may be room for something gentler to grow.