Bring a real question — about work, fear, purpose, or how to live — and draw on the great traditions: the Stoics, Scripture, Eastern philosophy, and the classics. Instant, source-grounded answers.
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How do different traditions answer: what do I do when I feel like my life has no purpose?
They converge more than you would expect. The Stoics say purpose is found in your duties, not your feelings — act well in the role in front of you. Scripture reframes it as being made for relationship and service, not self-actualization. Aristotle points to eudaimonia through excellent, habitual action. The shared move: stop hunting for a feeling and start acting on the next right obligation; meaning follows practice.