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What if purpose is not something we find, but something that becomes available when our lives align with who we are?
In this essay, I explore the difference between purpose as self-sacrifice and purpose as coherent participation. For a long time, I confused being useful with reducing my own ability to simply be in service of something greater. But I’m beginning to wonder whether that frame is backwards.
Perhaps our deeper work is not to become heroic, indispensable, or sacrificial, but to let the pattern of our living come into alignment with the pattern of our being.
Through the lens of the aperture, this piece reflects on clarity, coherence, availability, and what it means to participate in the evolution of a system without distorting ourselves in the process.
By Kari LaMotteWhat if purpose is not something we find, but something that becomes available when our lives align with who we are?
In this essay, I explore the difference between purpose as self-sacrifice and purpose as coherent participation. For a long time, I confused being useful with reducing my own ability to simply be in service of something greater. But I’m beginning to wonder whether that frame is backwards.
Perhaps our deeper work is not to become heroic, indispensable, or sacrificial, but to let the pattern of our living come into alignment with the pattern of our being.
Through the lens of the aperture, this piece reflects on clarity, coherence, availability, and what it means to participate in the evolution of a system without distorting ourselves in the process.