Symbolic image of man choosing between success and purpose reflecting the reality of getting what you wanted but still feeling empty

What Nobody Tells You About Getting What You Wanted

What Nobody Tells You About Getting What You Wanted

Nobody tells you that getting what you wanted can feel worse than not having it yet.

For a long time, I was living the kind of life that looked great from the outside. I had direction. I had drive. I studied civil engineering, landed a corporate job at a respected property development company, and wore the role proudly. I had a suit, a city office, structure, and a career path that made sense on paper. I signed up for every learning opportunity. I showed up. I performed.

And underneath all of it, I felt hollow.

I wanted the full picture — success, freedom, a fast car, a beautiful marriage, a thriving business. Not because anyone forced it on me, but because I genuinely believed that was the destination. That if I could just get the pieces in place, I would feel the way I was supposed to feel. Satisfied. Whole. At peace.

I was wrong.

The noise I used to call living

While I was building that life, I was also doing everything I could to avoid feeling it.

I drank. I smoked. I binged television and scrolled endlessly. I used recreational drugs almost daily. I traveled for the highs, not the insight. I surrounded myself with stimulation — loud places, new experiences, anything that gave me a momentary sense of being alive.

Every hit gave me a rush. Followed by an ache I couldn't shake.

I told myself it was just how people lived. That everyone was doing the same thing, more or less. And in my circles, that was mostly true. High-achievers with secret habits. Driven people running from something they couldn't name.

I couldn't name it either. Not yet.

The moment the mask slipped

I remember standing in my office one day, looking around at the open plan desks, the fluorescent lighting, the rhythm of meetings and deliverables and performance reviews — and thinking: this isn't it.

Not in a dramatic way. Just a quiet, clear knowing. Like a door closing somewhere inside me.

Two weeks later, I resigned.

I didn't have a plan. I just knew I couldn't keep pretending the life I had built was the life I wanted. I had been optimising for an outcome I had never actually chosen. I had inherited someone else's definition of success and called it my own.

That was the first honest thing I had done in years.

What I was really searching for

Looking back now, I can see what I was chasing underneath all of it. It wasn't the car or the career or the status. Those were proxies. What I was really searching for was a feeling — the feeling of being aligned. Of doing something that meant something. Of waking up and knowing, on a cellular level, that I was living the right life.

I just had no idea how to get there. And the world I had grown up in had given me exactly zero tools for finding it.

What I had been taught, directly and indirectly, was this: work hard, achieve more, look the part, and happiness will follow. It's a convincing story. It's also, for many of us, a slow and quiet betrayal of everything that actually matters.

The pull I kept ignoring

Even in the thick of it — the drugs, the performance, the hollow wins — there was something else present. A quiet pull I couldn't explain. Not a voice exactly. More like a presence. Still. Patient. Waiting.

I didn't have language for it then. I ignored it most of the time. But it never left.

That pull, I now understand, was my soul. It had been trying to get my attention for years. And eventually, after enough detours, enough highs that turned into aches, enough moments of looking around at my life and feeling nothing — I finally got quiet enough to hear it.

That was the beginning of everything.

What nobody told me

The emptiness was not a sign that something was wrong with me. It was a sign that something was right.

It meant I had not completely lost touch with the part of me that knew this was not the life I came here to live. The discomfort was not the problem — it was the signal. And signals, when you learn to read them, are one of the most valuable things you have.

Nobody told me that the hollow feeling behind the polished life was actually my soul refusing to settle. Nobody told me that the ache I kept numbing was information, not weakness. Nobody told me that the version of success I was chasing had nothing to do with the life I actually needed.

I had to find that out the hard way.

But here is what I know now: the emptiness is not the end of the story. It is the beginning of the real one.

I did not find what I was looking for by achieving more. I found it by getting honest, getting quiet, and learning to follow something deeper than ambition.

If you are reading this and something in it feels familiar — the performance, the numbness, the sense that you are living someone else's life — that feeling is not a problem to fix. It is your soul letting you know the destination you have been chasing was never really yours to begin with.

You are not broken. You are just ready for something real.

And that is exactly where the journey starts.

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