• Skip to content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Right Attitudes

Ideas for Impact

Two Questions for a More Intentional Life

July 14, 2025 By Nagesh Belludi Leave a Comment

Two Questions for a More Intentional Life There’s a familiar drift to human existence: most people stumble through life—nudged by inertia, lulled by routine, reacting rather than shaping. Life doesn’t unfold by conscious design but passive momentum.

Without direction, this becomes a circular walk around the obvious. The uncomfortable discovery—often too late—is that the journey was never a grand voyage, just an unexamined loop through what’s already known and safe.

Intentional living begins with clarity: of purpose, values, and direction. And clarity doesn’t arrive quietly. It’s not granted by idle reflection, but summoned by honest self-inquiry.

Two deceptively simple questions—profound in implication—serve as instruments of that clarity. These aren’t gentle affirmations. They’re sharp tools, meant not to soothe but to awaken.

1. How Do I Wish to Be Remembered?

The most powerful way to shape your life is to imagine its end. This isn’t vanity—it’s vision. What legacy will you leave? What stories should be told? If your life were a book, what would be its central theme?

This demands a reckoning with the impact you want to make—on your family, your community, maybe the world. It’s a litmus test of genuine contribution.

This isn’t about rigid life plans. It’s about orienting actions toward a destination that’s worthy of the journey. It forces clarity—of intent, values, and meaning.

2. Am I Spending My Life on What Gives It Meaning?

This question demands ruthless honesty—not about stated values, but about what your life actually reveals. Where do your time, energy, skills, and money go? Do these reflect your priorities—or betray quiet allegiance to comfort, distraction, or approval?

To answer is to perform intellectual triage—cutting the trivial from the vital, the meaningful from the performative. It calls for a dispassionate audit of commitments and a confrontation with the gap between ideals and actions.

More piercing still: What’s the point of living a life steeped in self-deception, compared to the legacy you claim to seek?

This question offers grounding—especially in upheaval. Returning to your core values can restore clarity and resilience. These values are your anchors—the fixed points by which to navigate shifting tides.

Meaning is the Profounder Object of Human Life

These aren’t therapeutic bromides. They are scalpels of self-inquiry, designed not for comfort but clarity. The honest answers may be inconvenient—even embarrassing. But the dignity of recalibration far outweighs drifting in the vast, indifferent sea of the unexamined.

Idea for Impact: Intentional living isn’t a destination—it’s a discipline. It requires ongoing reflection, courageous self-assessment, and the willingness to course-correct. These two questions—How do I wish to be remembered? and Am I Living What Matters?”—aren’t one-time prompts. They are lifelong companions.

In choosing this path, you give yourself a rare gift: a life not endured, but examined, shaped, and deeply felt.

Wondering what to read next?

  1. Buddhism is Really a Study of the Self
  2. What Do You Want to Be Remembered for?
  3. The Dance of Time, The Art of Presence
  4. What Is the Point of Life, If Only to Be Forgotten?
  5. You Are Not Special

Filed Under: Living the Good Life Tagged With: Balance, Discipline, Legacy, Life Plan, Life Purpose, Meaning, Mindfulness, Philosophy, Virtues

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

Popular Now

Anxiety Assertiveness Attitudes Balance Biases Coaching Conflict Conversations Creativity Critical Thinking Decision-Making Discipline Emotions Entrepreneurs Etiquette Feedback Getting Along Getting Things Done Goals Great Manager Innovation Leadership Leadership Lessons Likeability Mental Models Mentoring Mindfulness Motivation Networking Parables Performance Management Persuasion Philosophy Problem Solving Procrastination Relationships Simple Living Social Skills Stress Suffering Thinking Tools Thought Process Time Management Winning on the Job Wisdom

About: Nagesh Belludi [hire] is a St. Petersburg, Florida-based freethinker, investor, and leadership coach. He specializes in helping executives and companies ensure that the overall quality of their decision-making benefits isn’t compromised by a lack of a big-picture understanding.

Get Updates

Signup for emails

Subscribe via RSS

Contact Nagesh Belludi

RECOMMENDED BOOK:
Stumbling on Happiness

Stumbling on Happiness: Daniel Gilbert

Harvard psychologist Daniel Gilbert shares factual findings that will change the way you look at the world and seek happiness and joy.

Explore

  • Announcements
  • Belief and Spirituality
  • Business Stories
  • Career Development
  • Effective Communication
  • Great Personalities
  • Health and Well-being
  • Ideas and Insights
  • Inspirational Quotations
  • Leadership
  • Leadership Reading
  • Leading Teams
  • Living the Good Life
  • Managing Business Functions
  • Managing People
  • MBA in a Nutshell
  • Mental Models
  • News Analysis
  • Personal Finance
  • Podcasts
  • Project Management
  • Proverbs & Maxims
  • Sharpening Your Skills
  • The Great Innovators

Recently,

  • A Rule Followed Blindly Is a Principle Betrayed Quietly
  • Stoic in the Title, Shallow in the Text: Summary of Robert Rosenkranz’s ‘The Stoic Capitalist’
  • Inspirational Quotations #1122
  • Five Questions to Keep Your Job from Driving You Nuts
  • A Taxonomy of Troubles: Summary of Tiffany Watt Smith’s ‘The Book of Human Emotions’
  • Negative Emotions Aren’t the Problem—Our Flight from Them Is
  • Inspirational Quotations #1121

Unless otherwise stated in the individual document, the works above are © Nagesh Belludi under a Creative Commons BY-NC-ND license. You may quote, copy and share them freely, as long as you link back to RightAttitudes.com, don't make money with them, and don't modify the content. Enjoy!