Existential Pursuits

Can’t Have It All

Everyone wants to be happy. But very few people are willing to live a life that actually reflects what they want. Not what they say they want, not what they think they should want, but what they actually want. Because every desire has sacrifices.

If you want to be truly happy—not distracted, not just stabilized, but aligned with your values and ambitions—you have to build a life that prioritizes your actual desires. Which first means finding them, then choosing among them, then bearing the cost of following them in a world that never promised to make it easy to decide.

Lack of Simplicity

Desire is not simple. It doesn’t arrive easy to understand. It contradicts itself. You want independence and love. You want approval and authenticity. You want comfort and ambition. You want to stand out and belong. You want freedom and structure. You want to be seen but not judged.

Your happiness can’t be built by simply “doing whatever you want.” Because what you want will often pull you in conflicting directions. Your desires must be sorted, interrogated, and chosen between because not all desires are of the same priority or impact. Some feel crucial but are ultimately shallow. Others are subconscious yet necessary. Some offer short term hits of happiness that erode your long term stability. Others are difficult, even painful, but essential to the life you are trying to build.

Happiness isn’t just about chasing desire, it’s more so about clarifying it. It’s about tracing it to its root: asking not just what you want, but why you want it, if anyone told you to want it, and what the costs are if you pursue it. It’s understanding that this inner conflict is inevitable. Your mind will always want more. Part of building a better life is learning to carry that tension without letting it paralyze you. To clarify desire, choose consciously, and accept what you’re willing to sacrifice in its pursuit.

Lack of Acknowledgement

It’s easy to dismiss some desires as shallow, like wanting recognition, validation, status, or admiration. But you still want those things too, everyone does. You want to be liked, you want to be impressive, you want people to see what you’ve built and think well of you. And pretending you don’t want that doesn’t make you virtuous, it makes you dishonest.

Now, that doesn’t mean those desires should govern your life. But they should be acknowledged. Because when you repress them, they don’t disappear. They end up distorting your actions. You say you’re working on your craft, but you’re really performing it for attention. You say you’re pursuing personal growth, but you’re constantly comparing instead of building. You say you don’t care what they think, but every decision bends subtly toward what they want or expect from you.

There is no shame in wanting to be seen. There is only danger in letting that desire control your life without ever admitting it exists.

Part of pursuing what you really want is putting all your desires on the table, even the embarrassing ones, and making peace with the fact that being human means being conflicted. You don’t need to indulge every desire, but you do need to see them clearly. Nothing hijacks happiness faster than a life built around desires you won’t admit to having.

Choice

Once you’ve admitted everything you want, you must choose. You can’t have it all. And if you don’t choose which desires to prioritize, then the loudest ones will win by default. Usually the ones that comfort you in the short term, but sabotage you in the long term.

If you want mastery, you may have to sacrifice simplicity. If you want authenticity, you may lose the approval of certain people. If you want attachment, you may need to release your grip on control. If you want freedom, you may have to abandon structure. If you want growth, you may need to surrender stability. If you want love, you may have to risk rejection and vulnerability. If you want clarity, you may need to let go of comfort. If you want integrity, you may have to refuse opportunity. If you want self respect, you may need to disappoint others. If you want peace, you may need to accept that some problems cannot be solved.

There is no path that gives you everything. But there are paths that give you what matters most. And the only way to find them is to stop waiting for your desires to agree with each other, because they won’t. Your job isn’t to reconcile every desire, but to decide which ones to prioritize, and which ones aren’t that important.

This is why satisfaction is so difficult to obtain. Not because we’re incapable of finding it, but because it always demands a sacrifice we didn’t intend on having to make.

Lack of Choice

If you don’t build a life around what you genuinely want, you guarantee resentment. You end up bitter toward people who had the nerve to do what you couldn’t. You turn out irritable, unsure of why you could never obtain peace or satisfaction. You become suspicious of meaning and purpose itself, because you can’t remember the last time you chose something without checking if others would approve first, or the last time it genuinely fulfilled you.

This is the result of passive living. You never made the wrong choice because you never made any choice. And now your days are filled with routines that feel alien, relationships that lack depth, work that feels hollow, goals that lack purpose. You want your life to feel right, but you didn’t give it permission to belong to you.

You can’t be truly happy in a life that doesn’t reflect your own internal structure, values, and desires. You can distract yourself, you can stabilize the chaos, you can mask all your frustration. But you’ll still feel the dissonance. And eventually, you’ll start mistaking numbness for peace, and forget you ever had a choice at all.

Courage

To pursue what you genuinely want is to risk becoming a person others won’t recognize, understand, or even approve of. And that’s terrifying. Because most of us have been conditioned to earn belonging by shaping ourselves into whatever makes others comfortable. To desire boldly, especially when it contradicts the crowd, feels dangerous. It can cost you praise, certainty, even connection entirely. But the cost of not pursuing it is steeper.

You cannot outsource your fulfillment. You cannot change your true desires just to fit in. You cannot live someone else’s dream and hope it will somehow fulfill you.

If you want the purest kind of happiness, then you must shape your life around what matters most to you, even when it’s messy. Even when it’s conflicting. Even when it’s hard to explain. Even when you aren’t sure you’ll succeed. Because the alternative is to spend your life succeeding at everything except living the life you actually want.