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Why your successful life doesn’t leave you fulfilled

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You earn qualifications, polish your résumé, climb the ladder, grow your salary, and build your reputation. You’ve done everything you’re supposed to, so you (understandably) expect to feel on top of the world. Yet you remain unsatisfied despite accomplishing everything that you thought you wanted.

That sense of “What’s next?” is surprisingly common. According to a recent study by Headway app, 77% of people consider themselves successful, yet 81% also admitted feeling behind in some area of their lives.

The cause of your internal discontent

A lack of effort or having more to achieve isn’t the cause of your dissatisfaction. It stems from not doing what you really want to do. We often give professional progress high priority, but success holds different meanings for each of us. Some people see it as growing their investment portfolio, while others view it as making memories.

The Headway survey found that 33% still felt financially behind, despite their achievements. Likewise, 11% say they lack life experiences, 10% wish they had stronger relationships, and 10% are unhappy with their health. When you achieve something significant, that little “but” at the back of your mind can point you toward what you really want to work on.

Why you need to avoid the comparison trap

People often lose sight of their wants and start measuring themselves against others, especially when social media offers a constant reminder of how everyone is getting ahead. Most of us subconsciously know that it’s all staged, but our brains don’t automatically make that distinction. Instead, status anxiety—the innate desire to fit in and the fear of being perceived as unsuccessful—pushes us to chase the version of success that we see others striving toward.

In my book, Beyond Belief, I explain how our deep-rooted assumptions often shape our behaviors. However, these beliefs aren’t always in our best interests. We believe success is achieving what everyone else is achieving, so we do what they’re doing. It’s performative, and despite providing external success, it doesn’t feel that way internally.

How to be successful and satisfied

If you’re accomplished on paper but dissatisfied in practice, the issue usually lies in how you define success. You need to align your ambitions and actions and consider whether your beliefs allow you to recognize the progress you’ve already made.

The following steps should provide a good starting point:

Question what success means to you

Many of us assume that we should want certain goals and that success looks a particular way. However, that isn’t true, and it won’t make you happy. When achievements leave you feeling unfulfilled, you should question whether you’re pursuing success on your terms or someone else’s.

Is a high salary worth more to you than a career you love? Would you rather gain professional experience or life experience? Is starting your own business a more exciting prospect than landing a job within the Fortune 500?

There’s no right answer. Success is subjective, and figuring out what you truly want can help you to pursue something that genuinely makes you feel something.

Stop focusing on a single aspect of life

We have a habit of treating one aspect of life as the only metric that matters. But they all contribute to our satisfaction. When you focus too intensely on one aspect, you inevitably neglect others. Sure, you might achieve everything you strive for, but you’ll still feel that something is missing (because something is). Reaching the boardroom won’t compensate for chronic health struggles, and money can’t buy you more time with your loved ones.

You may reach your goal faster with intense focus, but what’s the cost? It’s incredibly telling when 42% of people question whether they’ve lost more than they’ve gained pursuing their ambitions.

Reframe how you think about progress

Our thoughts shape our behavior, and having a positive mindset can make all the difference.

If your attention is firmly on what you haven’t achieved yet, satisfaction will always feel out of reach. There will always be something more, and that leads to negative thoughts, like “I should be further along, and I need to work harder.” It’s a far better use of your energy to focus on what you have achieved: “I’ve accomplished so much, and I can overcome any challenge.” After all, which way of thinking is more likely to energize you and make all your effort feel worthwhile?

Stop putting a time limit on success

We tend to measure our achievements against those of others our own age. In fact, 81% say they feel behind their peers in at least one aspect of life. And when reality doesn’t keep up with your arbitrary timeline, even progress can start to feel like failure.

Success doesn’t follow a fixed schedule, and being a year or two older doesn’t take anything away from your accomplishments. If you’re learning, growing, and progressing, you’re succeeding. Age doesn’t change that.

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