10 questions to ponder when evaluating your purpose

It will take time to determine your values, draw on your passions, and fulfill voids that currently exist so you can enjoy a more fulfilling future.
The wasted pursuit of vanity

If one story I write or a podcast I produce can inspire just one person to help others, then I know their influence will become a legacy that outlives them for generations.
Don Gleason helps people make smoother life, career transitions

As a career transition coach, Don knows people desire change, but they don’t usually know what they want to do next or why.
28 suggestions to restore joy to your life today

If we can find one source of light and nurture it enough, we’ll produce more light. We will soon be enveloped in a feeling of joy and contentment.
Three keys for living well after retiring

Finding purpose post-retirement doesn’t need to be complicated. It can be as simple as showing up for others and being open to new connections.
84-year-old man completes journey along entire Amtrak rail line

Nat never grew tired of sitting up high in a rail car, like he was on a magic carpet, watching in fascination as America passed by.
Perry Gabbard describes achieving his 40-year dream to hike the Pacific Crest Trail on Episode 27

The trip was not only an adventure, but kind of a pilgrimage, both spiritually and physically, to overcome some things that had taken control of Perry’s life.
Your heart may feel dead and gone, but it’s there waiting to be released

The biggest choice we often face after reaching our 50th birthdays is whether or not to pursue what God is tugging at us to do.
P.U.R.P.O.S.E. What’s does it involve?

When you are over 50 and trying to identify what to do with your life, think about purpose from the perspective of the individual letters in the word.
Perry Gabbard lived a dream, found clarity on the Pacific Crest Trail

“There was a pull drawing me to the trail. It was like the way the Earth pulls at the moon from its perigee, or their closest points,” Perry explained. “My professional life was like the apogee, or the furthest point away from where I needed to be.