From “This Is Just How It Is” to “I’m Doing What I Want”: Rewriting Your Life’s Story with Intention

One of the most destructive myths in adulthood is the belief that the life we’re living is the life we’re stuck with. Somewhere along the line—often between responsibility, disappointment, and survival—many people internalize a silent surrender:

“This is just how it is now.”

Not because they’re happy, but because they’re tired.

Adulthood can bury dreams beneath mortgages, deadlines, routine, and expectations. People rarely give up because they lack ambition—they give up because the friction of everyday life slowly suffocates possibility.

Yet, under the surface, something remains:
An ache for meaning, autonomy, and self-direction.

Changing your circumstances is not about escaping responsibility or chasing fantasy. It’s about reclaiming authorship of your life—even at a stage when many assume the story is already written.


1. The Psychological Trap of Resignation

Resignation masquerades as realism.

“I can’t change careers now.”
“I’ve got too much to lose.”
“I’m too old to start over.”
“People don’t get to do what they want.”

These statements sound rational, but they often arise from learned helplessness—the belief, built through repeated setbacks, that effort doesn’t change outcomes.

Neuroscience reveals something uncomfortable:
We adapt to discomfort faster than we pursue growth.

Human beings normalize struggle faster than they normalize possibility.

We will tolerate:

  • Emotional dissatisfaction
  • Boredom
  • Toxic environments
  • Soul-deadening work
  • Creative suffocation

Because the brain is biased toward predictable misery over uncertain joy.

Resignation feels safe, not because it is fulfilling, but because it is familiar.

Breaking out of that pattern requires recognizing it as a psychological reflex rather than reality.


2. Identity Drift: How You Become Someone You Never Planned to Be

Life doesn’t change you all at once.
It changes you slowly, through incremental compromise.

  • Dreams shrink.
  • Confidence erodes.
  • Risks feel unreasonable.
  • Imagination becomes childish.
  • Passion feels irresponsible.

It’s not that people don’t want more—
They slowly forget how to want.

Identity drift often begins with perfectly reasonable choices:

  • Pay the bills
  • Support the family
  • Build stability

But over time, stability can become inertia.

And inertia slowly whispers a dangerous narrative:
“Who you are now is who you are forever.”

The truth is the opposite:
Identity is fluid.
Values evolve.
Capabilities expand.

The person you were at 25 may not be the person you need to be at 45.

A meaningful life is not a continuation of your past self—
It is a constant negotiation with your future self.


3. The Emotional Cost of Doing What You “Have To.”

Living by obligation erodes more than time—it erodes vitality.

Chronic misalignment produces:

  • Low-level depression
  • High irritability
  • Lack of purpose
  • Emotional numbness
  • Physical exhaustion
  • Loss of creativity
  • Confusion about meaning

Many describe it as “burnout,”
But often it is actually identity starvation.

We are not biologically wired to survive.
We are wired for agency, curiosity, contribution, and novelty.

When life becomes a repetitive cycle of tasks you tolerate but don’t care about, you start to detach emotionally from yourself and the world.

You stop dreaming not because you’re lazy,
But because dreaming becomes painful.

And when meaning disappears, the future becomes something you fear rather than design.


4. The Permission Problem: Why We Don’t Pursue What We Want

One of the most significant barriers to change is not external—it’s internalized judgment.

People feel guilty for wanting more than they already have, especially if they appear “successful” on paper.

Society often treats ambition after a certain age as indulgent.

But there is nothing irresponsible about pursuing:

  • Work you enjoy
  • A lifestyle that fits you
  • Creative expression
  • Autonomy
  • Fulfillment

There’s a profound difference between selfishness and self-realization.

Selfishness takes from others.
Self-realization contributes to others from a place of abundance.

The life you want is not a luxury.
It reflects your potential.

You don’t need external validation to justify wanting a life that feels like your own.


5. Understanding the Fear of Change: Loss, Uncertainty, Identity

People don’t fear change itself.
They fear what change might cost.

Three fears dominate:

1. Loss of security

“What if I fail and end up worse off?”

2. Loss of identity

“What if I’m not good at the thing I love?”

3. Loss of belonging

“What will people think if I walk away from the life they expect?”

These fears are not irrational.
They are existential.

But not facing them has its own cost:

  • Emotional decay
  • Stagnation
  • Resentment
  • Regret

Growth always requires risk,
But stagnation is also a gamble—with the highest odds of failure.


6. The Mechanics of Changing a Life: From Default to Design

Meaningful change is not a motivational moment—it’s a process.

Here is a framework that works:

Step 1: Articulate the life you want

Not a fantasy—
A clear, vivid description of a fulfilling reality.

Step 2: Identify the gaps

Skills, finances, time, environment, and confidence.

Step 3: Build a transition plan

Not a leap—
A gradual evolution.

Step 4: Restructure priorities

You cannot create a new life while living the old one at full capacity.

Step 5: Build a personal economy

Develop a skill that pays you for your strengths, interests, or creativity.

Step 6: Craft an identity that matches your future

Stop asking:

  • “What can someone like me do?”

Ask:

  • “What does the person I want to become practice daily?”

Success doesn’t come from intensity.
It comes from alignment.


7. The Quiet, Unromantic Truth About Reinvention

Transformation is not glamorous.

It’s not quitting your job and moving to the beach.

It’s:

  • Early mornings
  • Night classes
  • Discipline without applause
  • Micro-risks
  • Learning curves
  • Awkward beginnings
  • Imperfect progress

It is stunningly ordinary in the moment.
And astonishing in hindsight.

People who reinvent their lives don’t feel like heroes while doing it.
They feel like beginners.

Reinvention isn’t confidence—
It’s willingness.


8. Finishing Life with Intention, Not Compliance

There is a point in life when survival is no longer enough.

You don’t have to “make it big.”
You don’t have to impress anyone.
You don’t have to chase extremes.

But you do deserve:

  • Work that matters to you
  • Time that feels well spent
  • Relationships that enrich you
  • A body that feels alive
  • Peace with yourself

Living intentionally is not about living recklessly—
It is about living consciously.

At some point, you decide:
I will not finish my life as a passenger.

Not because you hate your past—
But because you refuse to abandon your future.


Final Insight: The Courage to Start Is More Important Than the Perfect Plan

Life doesn’t change because you finally have confidence.
Life changes because you act before confidence arrives.

Your circumstances are not fixed.
Your identity is not fixed.
Your future is not fixed.

The story isn’t over unless you stop writing it.

The real tragedy is not failing.
The real tragedy is never discovering what you might have become.

Most people never find out.
Not because they didn’t have potential—
But because they stayed where it felt safe.

The risk-reward isn’t always success.
Sometimes the reward is simply reclaiming the truth:

You are still capable of becoming someone new.

And that realization alone can resurrect a life.

Robert Bruton is a multifaceted creative visionary whose work spans literature, photography, and filmmaking. As an author, Robert’s captivating storytelling delves into the mysteries of human nature, life’s challenges, and the pursuit of purpose. His written works resonate with readers, offering profound insights and inspiration from his journey of perseverance and creativity.

https://www.amazon.com/author/robertbruton

Following Your Dreams vs. Doing What You “Have” to Do

At some point in life, nearly everyone faces the same dilemma: do you chase after your dreams, or do you settle for the job, the bills, and the responsibilities that keep you feeling stuck? This is a universal tension—between who you want to be and who you think you must be.

On one hand, there’s safety: a steady paycheck, predictable bills, maybe even the illusion of stability. On the other hand, there’s the fire inside—the dream you’ve carried since childhood, the vision of a life that feels alive, purposeful, and uniquely yours. Most people end up choosing the “safe” path, not because they lack dreams, but because they feel trapped by obligations.

But here’s the truth: the reasons you stay stuck—bills, other people’s opinions, fear of failure—are rarely as permanent as they seem. In the long run, those reasons won’t matter nearly as much as whether you lived your life with purpose. You can find a way, even when you don’t know how. And the journey toward your dreams doesn’t require reckless abandon; it requires courage, clarity, and persistence.

This article explores what it means to follow your dreams versus doing what you feel obligated to do, why people get stuck, and how you can move from survival mode into a life of significance.

Why So Many People Feel Stuck

The Weight of Bills and Responsibilities

The most common reason people give for not pursuing their dreams is financial. Mortgage payments, car loans, student debt, or simply the cost of keeping food on the table can feel like chains that keep you tethered to a job you hate. And on the surface, it makes sense—bills don’t wait for inspiration.

But if we peel back the layers, bills are only temporary. They are recurring, yes, but they don’t define your existence. What defines you is how you respond to those pressures. Some people stay in survival mode forever, while others begin building pathways out, even one step at a time.

Fear of the Unknown

Dreams, by definition, carry risk. You may fail. You may embarrass yourself. People may question you. The fear of “what if” is often louder than the hope of “what could be.” That fear is what keeps people stuck in jobs that don’t inspire them.

External Expectations

Many of us live lives designed by other people: parents, teachers, bosses, or society at large. “Be practical.” “Get a good job.” “Don’t rock the boat.” These voices echo so loudly that sometimes we forget our own.

The Cost of Staying Stuck

Emotional Burnout

Living a life you don’t love isn’t just inconvenient—it takes a toll on you. Stress, anxiety, lack of motivation, and even physical health issues often stem from doing work that doesn’t align with who you are.

Missed Potential

Every day you spend ignoring your dreams is a day you’ll never get back. The world never gets to see the book you wanted to write, the company you wanted to build, the art you wanted to share. Potential unused becomes regret later in life.

Regret at the End of Life

One of the most common regrets of the dying, documented by hospice nurses, is: “I wish I had lived a life true to myself, not the life others expected of me.” Bills and obligations fade, but regret endures.

Why Following Your Dreams Matters

Fulfillment Over Survival

When you pursue something that truly matters to you, even if it’s difficult, you feel alive. Work becomes more than just a paycheck; it becomes an extension of your identity and a reflection of your passion.

The Ripple Effect

When you chase your dreams, you inspire others to do the same—your children, friends, and even strangers who see your courage. Following your dreams isn’t selfish; it’s contagious.

Growth Through Challenge

Dreams aren’t easy, and they’re not supposed to be. They stretch you, force you to grow, and teach you resilience. Even if you stumble, you’ll be stronger for having tried.

“I Don’t Know How”: Finding a Way Forward

The biggest obstacle people mention is not knowing how to leap. But the truth is, you don’t have to know the whole path—you only need to see the next step.

Step 1: Get Clear on the Dream

Please write it down. Be specific. “I want to start a bakery” is more powerful than “I want freedom.” The clearer the dream, the easier it becomes to see paths forward.

Step 2: Take Tiny, Consistent Steps

You don’t need to quit your job tomorrow. You can begin evenings, weekends, or mornings before work. Dreams don’t require giant leaps—they require steady steps.

Step 3: Simplify Your Life

Many people are trapped because of financial overextension. Downsizing expenses, selling what you don’t need, or eliminating debt creates breathing room for your dreams.

Step 4: Build Resilience Against Fear

Fear will always show up. The trick is not to wait until you’re fearless, but to act while afraid. Courage isn’t the absence of fear—it’s moving forward despite it.

Step 5: Find Your People

Surround yourself with encouragers, dreamers, and doers. The wrong voices will tell you it’s impossible. The right voices will remind you it’s inevitable.

Stories of “Finding a Way”

J.K. Rowling

Before she became one of the most successful authors of all time, Rowling was a single mother living on welfare, writing in cafés while her baby napped. She didn’t know how her dream of being a writer would work out. She kept showing up on the page.

Walt Disney

Disney was fired from a newspaper job for “lacking imagination.” He went bankrupt several times before building the empire we know today. If anyone had reasons to quit, it was him. Instead, he found ways to keep creating.

Everyday Heroes

Not every dream ends in fame or fortune. Some are quieter: the teacher who leaves corporate life to inspire children, the mechanic who opens his own garage, the mother who goes back to school in her 40s. These stories prove that what matters isn’t scale—it’s alignment.

The Mindset Shift

The most significant transformation comes when you realize that “I have to” is often a story you tell yourself. You don’t have to stay in the same job forever. You don’t have to ignore your passions. You choose to—for now. And choice means you can also decide differently.

Bills don’t vanish, but neither does your potential. Both exist, and both can be managed. The mindset shift is this: instead of seeing bills as chains, see them as stepping stones. Pay them while you build. Use them as fuel for your determination.

Practical Exercises

  1. Vision Journal – Write down in detail what your dream life looks like. Where do you live? What work do you do daily? Who are you with? The more vivid, the more motivating.
  2. Fear Mapping – List every fear you have about pursuing your dream. Then write down what would happen if that fear came true. Most aren’t as devastating as they feel.
  3. One-Hour Rule – Dedicate one hour a day to your dream, no matter what. Over a year, that’s 365 hours—nearly the equivalent of nine 40-hour workweeks.
  4. Reverse Timeline – Imagine your dream accomplished. Now work backward step by step to where you are today. This often reveals practical next steps.

The Long View

Dreams aren’t accomplished overnight. They may take years, even decades. But if you keep taking steps, the compounding effect of consistent effort will surprise you. One day, the life you once only imagined will be the life you’re living.

And when you look back, the bills, the doubts, and the fear won’t matter. What will matter is that you found a way.

Life is short, but it’s also long enough to waste if you’re not intentional. You can spend decades stuck in jobs that drain you, telling yourself that obligations are more important than dreams. Or you can decide—today—to take even the smallest step toward the life you want.

Yes, there will be bills. Yes, there will be obstacles. But those things are temporary. What’s permanent is the imprint you leave on the world by daring to live fully alive.

You don’t have to know the entire path. You only have to start walking. And in time, you’ll discover the truth: you were never as stuck as you thought—you were only one decision away from freedom.

Robert Bruton is a multifaceted creative visionary whose work spans literature, photography, and filmmaking. As an author, Robert’s captivating storytelling delves into the mysteries of human nature, life’s challenges, and the pursuit of purpose. His written works resonate with readers, offering profound insights and inspiration from his journey of perseverance and creativity.

https://www.amazon.com/author/robertbruton

Fear Of Success

“Apple Computer would not have reached its current peak of success if it had feared to roll the dice and launch products that didn’t always hit the mark. In, the mid-1990s, the company was considered washed up, Steve Jobs had departed, and a string of lackluster product launches unrelated to the company’s core business”.– Naveen Jain

it’s time to overcome fear!

Fear of success, you would d think not a soul would have that. You would be wrong. Many folks have a fear of success. Sadly many will sabotage any chance for success, by saying “it’s too hard,” “I don’t have the resources,” or quit because it’s hard. Ever heard the phrase no pain no gain, (I know an old cliche)?

The actual difference about a winner and a loser: Getting up one more time! Being able to take a shot from life, get knocked the f&*k out and getting up one more time. In the face of what is the point, get up! If you can do that, you will succeed.

self help, happy, overcome fear

Most of us are afraid of the unknown so don’t feel like you’re the only one. If you jump out and leave yourself vulnerable what is the worst thing that might happen? Seriously? What the hell are any of us afraid of? Oh my God, we might fail! Okay, then what? If all you did was put yourself out there to achieve something more and you failed, now what? You didn’t die, you’re still standing, breathing, 10 fingers and 10 toes.

The worst thing you have to begin again. What the hell is wrong with that. You contemplate your next plan of attack. Choose a new path, what does that path look like? Stop being afraid to just try something new. Find something you’re not scared of. Perhaps it’s when you met someone you were really attracted to. Most people can talk more shit when it’s something that they really want than they ever imagined possible. Some of you would call that game. Why because they are passioned about the end result. Fear is no longer an issue.

Ladies when you’re trying to land that perfect guy you want to spend the rest of your life with. Your conversation is on it’s “A” game. Fear diminishes because your charms take over.  The end result decreases all fear.

What we’re saying here is find the passion in what you’re doing, what diminishes fear is game. Learn all you can about what it is you want to do. Have “game.” When you find the exact reason for what you wish to achieve, family, success, relationship or building the next great business. Find what truly passions you and then allow yourself to stumble, fall, bust your ass over and over. Until one day you take a shot and you don’t fall, you take hit after hit, and you’re still standing. You look around you and figure out you have the game, you have confidence in YOU.

So some of you are still sitting here saying easier said than done you ass. You don’t just change. Okay, I will give you that to some small measure. Until you make a conscious decision to change, I mean a no bullshit decision without any caveats. Then yes you will not find the change you seek.

Most people kick their own ass. You lose before you ever get in the ring to fight, by just telling yourself you can’t. Or you listen to naysayers that say you can’t, sadly these are usually people close to us family.

So stop telling people what you’re going to do and do it! Don’t tell a soul what you doing, misery loves the company and guesses what the only person that wants success for you, Damn well better be just you. Mothers will say, “oh yes honey I want you to be the President of the United States, but with one caveat don’t hurt yourself” sorry princess you don’t get jobs like that without taking some real shots to the gut (no offense Moms, people close to us love us and don’t want to see us in pain, that’s natural).

If you can’t take a shot from life right to the balls and get back up. Then expect the same result you now achieve. You have to put yourself out their take shot. It may be painful, it may hurt, but it won’t kill you! What doesn’t kill you makes you stronger don’t you love stupid cliches.

If needed stand in a room by yourself and scream at the top of your voice “I am not a scared pussy, and those that think I am can kiss my fucking ass.” Scream that as loud and crazy as you can. Stop reading and do it now if you’re not in front of children. If you are, scream in a pillow. Do something that gets your blood boiling, be mad at the world and tell the world NO MORE, I AM DONE, IT’S MY TURN TO WIN.

So you go out and try something it utterly fails, you look foolish, WHO THE FUCK CARES? What colossal injustice you suffered for a whopping few minutes. Next week, next few days I doubt anyone involved will even remember your screw up. So don’t be afraid to screw up because if you jack it up guess what your not so special that people honestly give two shits they’re dealing with their own shit.

Take time to find passion in what you want to try. Yell, scream, get excited about your whatever. Don’t be afraid to screw up. It’s not the end of the world if you do. Kid drops a high fly ball to center field and loses the game. What does a parent say, don’t worry son you will win the next one, it was a mistake, and you will get the next one. So yes folks guess what if you screw up you will get the next one.

You can overcome fear, I bet if someone bitch slapped your Mom, you could find the strength to fight back to protect her. If someone were hurting you or a family member, you would see the strength in yourself to fight back. So you can overcome fear with the right motivation. Merely being sick and tired of being sick and tired, should move your ass. Stop taking a beating to get up and hit back. Methodically of course!

Still not convinced you can overcome your fear? First off it’s okay. Fear can be debilitating if you let it. Things can be easier said than done, that does not mean impossible. Nor is it impossible for you to change.

Change can happen by taking baby steps. Do one thing, just a straightforward matter to overcome fear. Go to a coffee house and strike up a conversation with a total stranger. If nothing more than in passing saying “how about this weather?” If it’s awful, make it just getting off your ass and going out the door. We’re not candy coating things get off your ass and do one thing. I am not asking you out on a second date, do just one small step! That act in and of itself is a step forward, excellent job!!!

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