Stop chasing happiness through others' approval and external milestones. Build it instead through honest choices aligned with God's unique design for your life today.
You're running toward something you can't see.
The promotion.
The relationship.
The version of yourself that finally has it all together.
You think once you get there, once you cross that invisible line, you'll exhale.
You'll be happy.
But you've crossed lines before, haven't you?
And the feeling lasted about 48 hours before you were back to running.
That script that tells you to get the degree.
Land the job.
Find the person.
And THEN you’ll be happy is not your script…
Someone else wrote it. You've been reading their lines.
And you're exhausted.
Think about the last time you felt truly alive.
Not proud.
Not validated.
Alive.
It wasn't when you got the title or the paycheck, right?
It was when you took the risk.
When you did the thing that scared you.
When you stopped asking permission and just moved.
That's the blueprint.
Not the one they handed you.
The one you write yourself, guided by God.
Matthew 6:21 says, "For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also."
Because you've been storing up treasure in places that can't hold it.
Other people's approval.
External markers of success.
But your heart's not there. You know it's not.
You're building something different.
Something that might not make sense to anyone else.
And that's the point.
Happiness is in the foundation you're laying right now:
Every day you choose yourself.
Every time you listen to what your gut's been screaming at you..
Every moment you stop performing and start living.
So, here's what you can do right now:
Write down one thing you've been doing for someone else's approval.
Just one.
Then ask yourself:
What would I do if no one were watching?
If it were just me and the life I actually want?
Start there.
You're not looking for happiness anymore. You're building it. One honest choice at a time. Because the greatest happiness you’ll ever find isn’t out there; it’s inside you.
