As I turn 40
Is 40 the beginning of the end or the
end of the beginning? I have had many sleepless nights these past few months
wondering what the future holds for me as I turn 40.
As I turn 40 today, I look back to the
dreams I had as a 19 year old. One afternoon
in my final year at St Mary’s
College Kisubi, my 8 Literature classmates and I had an impromptu discussion
about our dreams. We all had big, big dreams. Amongst other things I shared
that day, I said I wanted to be a big shot criminal lawyer. And I planned to switch
to becoming a novelist at around 40. A bit like John Grisham, one of my
favourite writers. In my mind by 40, I would also be married and have 3 kids.
Looking back, things did not turn out exactly
as planned. I became a business lawyer, I am not about to become abandon law to
become a novelist and I am married with 1 kid -for now -).
But along the way, there are a few
things I am learning;
1.
Your purpose may be hidden in plain
sight
What unique thing were you created for
on this earth? This is a question many of us have to confront at some point in
our lives. In my 30s I wrestled a lot
with this question. In a bid to find answers, I read a lot of self-help
books. Most of them essentially said
find your purpose and then everything else in your life will fall in line. The
problem was they did not prescribe exactly how to find that very elusive
purpose. The books which did prescribe how-to, told you how the writer found
their purpose which might not work for you. For instance some of them had their
purpose revealed in form of a dream or a vision. Good luck having yours
revealed in a dream! Others said first find your passion then you will find
your purpose. But what if you do not know your passion? Then you have a new
problem, find your passion! A bit like those annoying simultaneous mathematical
equations we had to study at school which had two unknowns, x and y, which we
had to solve.
For the longest time, I was questioning
whether being a business lawyer was my purpose. At 40, I have now come to the learn
that there
is no one-size-fits-all way of discovering your purpose. You may find it out as
child (good on you!) or you may find it out in old age accidentally. Finding it
out in old age is also ok. In fact scripture
says that, “He has made everything beautiful in its time”. Perhaps you
needed all your previous life experiences in order to finally figure things out
in old age. Your purpose could be more than one thing. And you could have
different purposes for the different seasons in your life. And if you keep
searching desperately for lofty ideas to turn into your purpose, it could hold
you back from being more intentional in what you are already doing now.
And here is the thing: many
of us are actually staring hard at our purpose as we go about each day but we
simply do not know it because we think our purpose is some grand mission which
will instantly change the world and will come wrapped in a big envelope marked
with our names in red ink and the words “YOUR PURPOSE.”
If many of us knew that some of the
seemingly ordinary things we are all already doing form the sum of our life’s
purpose, maybe we would be more intentional about doing them. Our purpose could
include being a great parent, or spouse or friend, being that person who always
shows up for others, being that guy who always gives their work their best or
it could be a grand idea which keeps you awake at night or all the above. By being intentional about the things we do
whether seemingly big or small, the ordinary would become extra-ordinary and
change our families, our workspaces, our cities, our nations and even the
world.
2. The gift of
interruption
Sometimes we are
challenged to take an unlikely path which is very different from the one we
curved out for ourselves. Towards the end of 2019, I had a chat with a friend who
I consider one of my spiritual mentors. He challenged me to share a sermon at Church.
If we had had the same conversation a year before that, I would have laughed in
his face as I had always seen my role in church as that of someone who can give
feedback to the preacher as opposed to being the preacher, a critic rather than
the man in the arena. This time, I considered it. And the result is, since last
year I have shared a few sermons in church. I am not about to leave my legal
profession, but I am grateful about how that one conversation interrupted my
own plans and gave me an opportunity to grow as Christian and share the word
with others. Be open to the gift of interruption. You might be pleasantly
surprised!
3. Time is one of
the best gifts you can give any one
Life is
fleeting. In a world where everyone is
too absorbed with work and the little time left after work is spent trying to
get the next high, from the watching the latest series, or flipping through
social media, while juggling family duties, time has become a very scarce
resource. Anyone with lots of money can easily give money because there is more
where that came from. But our time is limited. One of the best gifts you can
give any one you love or care about is the gift of your undivided time and
attention. Be present for them and show up on the special days of their lives.
4. Forgive yourself
for the things that you didn’t know
Have you ever discovered something that you
ended up wishing you had known before and then you start playing back in your
mind the many things that you would have done differently had you known before?
Happens to me a lot. Light bulb moments which came a bit late in the game. And
then instead of rejoicing about this win, you fixate on the even bigger win you
imagine you would have had if you had known earlier. Learn to forgive yourself for the things that
you did when you did not know better. Maya Angelou puts it well when she says,
“ I did then what I knew how to do. Now that I know better, I do better.”
5. An attitude of
gratitude
Life is not
always fair. Sometimes some really bad things happen to really good people. And
make us question the meaning of life. 2020 and 2021 have brought so much uncertainty
and pain in the world. But it has also reminded us to be thankful for the
things we take for granted- the oxygen we breath, good health, friends, family,
a place to sleep, a country to call home…
I am especially
thankful for the people including friends, family and strangers who were there
for me in seasons when I was at my most doubtful, most clueless, most timid,
most lost, in a new country, a new school, in a new work place, dealing with
new challenges. The ones who drew me in under their wings and looked out for
me- brother’s keepers. I have started writing notes to some of them to say how
thankful for the role they played at critical moments in my life.
Grateful for my
Dad and Mum and my siblings, Paul, Barns and Esther. And especially thankful
for my wife Annette and son Caleb who have given me the best years of my life
yet. And most importantly I am grateful to God.
I do not know what season of your life you are at or what dreams you have. Whatever they are, I hope you will find the courage to seek them. And may you be all that you were created you to be! NB; This article was first published on 20/06/21 when I turned 40.
Top. ! Thank you Counsel for this nice read.
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