| “Efforts and courage are not enough without purpose and direction.” — John F. Kennedy I firmly believe that whatever you’re passionate about will drive you to your purpose in life. Not the polished kind of passion. Not the version you can turn into a title or a clean answer when someone asks what you do. I’m talking about the kind that lingers. The kind that shows up uninvited. The thing that keeps pulling at you—even when you’re trying to be practical, even when you’re trying to choose the “safe” option. For a long time, I thought purpose was something you figured out once. Like you’d arrive at it, claim it, and move forward with certainty from there. But the more I’ve lived, the more I’ve realized it doesn’t work like that. Purpose doesn’t arrive fully formed. It reveals itself slowly, through what you pay attention to and what you refuse to ignore. Sometimes it shows up as excitement or frustration. Sometimes it’s the thing that makes you pause and ask yourself why you care so much in the first place. That question matters more than we give it credit for. Because passion leaves clues. The things that light you up are part of it, yes. But so are the things that break your heart, the things that make you want to step in, speak up, create something better, or do something different. That pull isn’t random. It’s trying to guide you somewhere. The problem is, we don’t always trust it. We want purpose to be clear. Structured. Easy to explain. We want it to come with a plan we can hand to someone else and say, this is where I’m going. But purpose doesn’t always offer that kind of clarity upfront. Sometimes it just asks you to move. To take one step. To follow something that doesn’t fully make sense yet. And that can feel uncomfortable. Being purposeful isn’t about having everything figured out. It’s about being honest about what matters to you and choosing it anyway. It’s about making decisions that align with that truth, even when they don’t come with immediate validation or reward. It also means letting go. Letting go of roles, expectations, or versions of yourself that no longer fit. And that part can be just as hard as starting something new. We don’t talk enough about how uncomfortable growth can feel when it requires releasing something that once made sense. But staying in something that no longer aligns will cost you more overtime. There’s a quiet kind of courage in paying attention to your own life. In noticing what keeps coming back. In trusting that the things you care deeply about are worth exploring, even if you don’t have all the answers yet. I don’t think purpose is a single destination. I think it evolves as you do. I think it deepens, stretches, and sometimes even surprises you. And if you stay connected to what matters—if you keep showing up to it, even in small ways—it will shape the direction of your life. Live loud. Live audacious. |










