Power 9: Habit 2 of 9
Having a clear reason to wake up in the morning adds up to seven years to life expectancy.
Purpose is not a grand philosophical project. It is a sense of meaning, direction, or contribution that makes life feel worth waking up for: something specific enough that it shapes your behavior on an ordinary Tuesday. Okinawans have a word for it: ikigai (生き甲斐), which translates loosely as "the reason I exist" or "that which makes life worth living." In Nicoya, the equivalent phrase is plan de vida, literally "life plan," a concrete sense of what you are here to do.
The forms vary enormously. An elderly Okinawan fisherman whose ikigai is the daily work that has defined his life for decades. A Sardinian shepherd whose identity is inseparable from his flock and his hills. A Nicoyan grandparent whose plan de vida is entirely structured around grandchildren. A Loma Linda Adventist whose purpose is service to a faith community. The content is almost irrelevant. What matters is that it is real, personally experienced, and structurally present in daily life.
Purpose also appears to buffer against the biological consequences of aging's losses. When retirement, widowhood, or declining health strips away prior sources of identity, people with a deeply held secondary purpose (a craft, a community role, a grandchild to help raise) show measurably better health outcomes than those who lose the central pillar of their identity and have nothing behind it.
A 2008 Ohio Longitudinal Study tracked over 7,000 people for 14 years and found that individuals with a strong sense of purpose had a 15% lower all-cause mortality rate than those without one, even after controlling for health status, income, and other confounders. The effect held across age groups, including participants in their 40s and 50s, not just the elderly.
A 2019 meta-analysis published in JAMA Network Open pooled data from 10 cohort studies involving over 136,000 participants. Across all studies, people who reported a clear sense of life purpose had significantly lower all-cause mortality and lower cardiovascular mortality compared to those who did not. The cardiovascular finding is particularly significant: purpose appears to act on the heart directly, not merely through general health behavior improvements.
The mechanisms are becoming clearer. People with a strong sense of purpose maintain lower resting cortisol levels, show better preserved immune function as they age, and have lower circulating levels of inflammatory markers including interleukin-6 (IL-6) and C-reactive protein (CRP), both of which are reliably associated with accelerated biological aging. Purpose appears to operate through the same stress-response pathways as other psychological resilience factors, but with a longer time horizon and more consistent daily activation.
Across the five zones
Start here
Write down in one sentence what you would miss most if it were gone from your life. Not what you think you should value, but what you would actually, specifically grieve. Carry that sentence. Read it on hard mornings.
Identify one skill you want to master in the next decade. Not dabble in, but master. Take one concrete step toward it this week: enroll in something, buy a book, call someone who already has the skill.
Commit to one regular act of giving that requires your specific presence, not a donation but your time. Volunteer once a month, teach a skill, mentor someone younger. Make it regular enough to count on.
On your birthday each year, ask: am I still living toward what matters? What has drifted? What has become clearer? A written annual check-in prevents the slow erosion of purpose through accumulating distraction.
If you cannot name your purpose, start by listing what makes you angriest about the world. What injustice or insufficiency do you find intolerable? Purpose almost always hides inside frustration. The anger tells you what you care enough about to act on.