Greatly paraphrashing for the sake of brevity, but the idea that has guided me since then is that we cannot help but take some action or perform some work. At the very least we need to eat, but to eat we need to get some food and cook it. We need to get shelter from the elements. You know all the basic stuff. Ok, so let's say we have a job in order to satisfy just the basic requirements to stay alive. Do we work just for that reason alone? No! Doing so traps us into this vicious materialistic cycle. A dreary life of working and paying bills and buying things that please our senses but are ultimately unsatisfying.
So, we need to work, but working for even the barest of material benefit is a trap so what to do? The answer is work with detachment. Work because you know you have to and you like what you do, but that's it. Break the connection to the material outcomes of work. Your work needs to transcend materialistic concerns.
If you are so inclined religiously you work for the satisfaction of God, work is itself an offering. Your work transcends, then, the materialistic trap.
If you are more atheistic then perhaps take the attitude that human society as a greater good needs as many of us to Do The Right Thing. Scientific studies show we are social creatures and the good positive contributions we make invariably help others, even if we don't see it. Even if we're just installing POS software at a chain restaurant along a busy freeway. Even such a mundane endeavor is a glorious celebration of simply Being!
To me, this seems like the main thing that differentiates me from my peers. I love software, the fact that I can have the equivalent of hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of specialized equipment (e.g., media editing) in a little box that I can carry with me anywhere, and these tools are so good, that even professionals with access to the specialized hardware choose to use the software versions instead---
I don't think I'll ever be bored with not only the infinite possibilities, but also the extraordinary democratization, that software has created. I love software.
This has been a huge boon. I know what I have to do, and it's tied to a why.
It really is quite clear how few people really appreciate what a miracle their life is.
Literally, the probability of you being here reading this right now is so astronomically low, as to mathematically qualify as a miracle.
Almost every response to this type of question is within the context of the person's job. What a failure of perspective. Is your world really that tiny? Maybe you should pull your head out of your iPhone?
There was a whole lot of time, let's just call it an eternity, before each of us was born. There will be another whole lot of time, let's just call it another eternity, after we're dead. During this tiny little gap in between those eternities is this little window where each of us gets to be a conscious entity. A tiny transient spark of life, aware of the universe around us.
Given that context, you're saying you can't understand why you should be happy to be here?
It's a low bar to clear, so it isn't intimidating, but it drives me to make intentional connections, be curious, and contribute stuff to my household and the world.
i think i've fried my brain way too much in my early 20s that i got this mild anhedonia from anything external.
but it's nice, these days i get to do and enjoy things out of pure interest and curiosity.
it's now less of a grind, and now more of "given x time, y resources, and z opportunies around me, what is a much more entertaining outcome that i can come up with?"
Otherwise, money