A recurring theme of my 30s has been realizing how clueless I am about most things. In my 20s, I seemed to have more answers. The answers, of course, came almost exclusively from other people. It was naive to latch on to them, but at least it was easy. It helped me live with conviction, if only ever for a short period of time.
What’s frustrating about living by other people’s answers is that, sooner or later, those answers will always let you down. I did get burned out from that. Eventually, I always found a fatal flaw in this mentor or that guru. So one day, I concluded heroes were also just people and stopped following any template in particular.
The flip side is that I’m now as clueless as everybody else in navigating this life, and that, too, is challenging. It is also…just life. There are no answers. Nobody knows where the stock market will go, whether this election or that one will be good for the future of a country, or how they can do a great job at work without messing up. There’s no one right way to raise your kids, no perfect diet, and no meaning of life except the one you choose for yourself. That’s why being an adult is scary.
What I do know is that it’s okay to be scared, that the future is less frightening when you realize you’re not the only one facing the unknown, and that, in the end, asking good questions is more important than obsessing over answers which can never last to begin with.
Start with here. Start with now. Take one breath, one step, and learn something for tomorrow. It’s an answerless world we live in, but that’s one of the many parts that makes it a beautiful one–if only we learn to coexist with the unknown.