No ambition: is it really a bad thing?
Do you struggle to come up with an answer when someone asks what you hope to do next in life? Discover why having no ambition might not be such a bad thing after all...
Do you lack burning ambition? While we are often encouraged to have the ‘next step’ in our lives meticulously planned out, perhaps life is better when you donโt live according to a bullet point list. Hazel Davis explores the positives of having no ambition, before discussing how to find the perfect balance between planning and living…
‘What do you want to do next?โ asked my friend, Annie, as we sat on my sofa, guzzling chocolate and watching Girls. โUm, shall we start another episode?โ I suggested, contentedly. โNo, I mean in life!โ she said. There was a silence. It hadnโt occurred to me that there was a next.
There I was, with a moderately successful freelance career, two children, several musical instruments that I enjoyed playing in my spare time and a garden. What could possibly be next? โCareer goals, a bigger house, more money,โ she pressedโฆ โWhere do you want to be in 10 yearsโ time?โ โEr, I donโt know. Still alive?โ I replied.
Why do I have no ambition?
I think about that conversation a lot. Unlike Annie, I don’t know why but I have never felt the drive to do better and have more. I work a lot in the business arena and Iโm constantly bombarded by lessons โ hell, Iโve even written them โ on striving for better things, attaining goals and devising five-year plans. I have always drifted. After drifting into academia, I drifted out again before drifting into freelance writing and, well, staying here.
A few years ago, an editor colleague of mine suggested that I apply for a senior position at a magazine, a role for which I was mentally and experientially qualified. I was flattered that he saw fit to recommend me but it seemed like such a faff.
My partner has a degree in medieval English and is the cleverest person that I know. When we left university, he got a job at a wholefood cooperative, a company heโd wanted to work for since he first heard about it.
A few years later, my aspirational uncle asked him what he intended to do next. โAfter what?โ asked my bemused partner. โAfter this job,โ countered my uncle. โThis canโt be what you want to do with your life.โ That was in 2003 and my partner remains employed by that company. I think itโs true to say that heโs not hankered after another job.
The pressure of ambition
Of course, drive can be a good thing. Evolution is, after all, a competitive process. Weโre taught that, as humans, our ambition led us to invent the wheel, walk on the moon, cure the deadliest diseases and ascend the highest mountains.
This type of motivation does not show itself in other species, which donโt achieve just for the sake of it. Weโre constantly told, certainly as women, to be more ambitious and to dream big. But is having no ambition really such a bad thing?
Finding what motivates you
In his book, Drive: The Surprising Truth About What Motivates Us (Canongate, ยฃ9.99), Daniel Pink argues that human motivation is mostly intrinsic โ that it is not dependent on external factors, such as earnings or status โ and that the aspects of our innate motivation can be divided into autonomy, mastery and purpose.
Working part-time, my partner has a huge degree of autonomy, he has purpose and heโs confident heโs doing a sometimes-difficult job well. Working for myself, I think I could argue that I have the same.
So, why is it hard to say, โIโm happy as I amโ? If we had a bigger house, perhaps it would sit better with certain people โ our modest end-of-terrace is hardly on anyoneโs bucket list. We donโt save to go travelling the world for the entire summer holiday, something I suspect would impress some of our peers more than, โMm, not sure what weโre doing โ working in the garden, I guess, and watching films.โ
Donโt get me wrong. I toil hard and I play hard, too. Most people I know would say I was always on the go. I never turn down jobs, I frequently write until late into the night and Iโm in about a million clubs. I donโt sit still, so itโs not like I canโt be bothered โ I just canโt be bothered to have an ambition. But is this type of thinking detrimental in any way?
Do our goals help or hinder us?
My friend Annie says she sets goals because they help her define who she wants to be. โI set out my values and take actions that feed those values,โ she says, adding that listing achievable goals, such as โwriting 20,000 words of my novel by Marchโ, is more likely to help them come to fruition than a vague, โMaybe Iโll write a novel one dayโ.
Sheโs not wrong. How many times have I idly wondered whether I might perhaps one day write that film script idea Iโve had kicking around at the back of my mind for years? Itโs never going to happen because, well, I would have to make a commitment to do it.
Psychotherapist Hilda Burke is on my side, at least partially. โWhen you live your life as a series of goals, there can be a hollowness to it,โ she says. โPeople achieve their goals quicker than they expect to sometimes and there is a sense of โI donโt feel as good as I thought I would about thatโ โ and there is a comedown.โ
Setting meaningful goals
For attaining a goal to feel good, there has to be reflection on the lessons you have learned along the way. โOtherwise, there might be no real sense of achievement โ you feel the need to instantly replace one ambition with another,โ she says.
Burke suggests that people who are too fixated on goals can struggle with the idea of simply being themselves, and their identity is mixed in with goal attainment.
Moreover, she adds, โIf youโve meticulously planned everything in your life, what happens when illness, or a new relationship that needs your attention, gets in the way of your goal?โ How important is that goal in the grand scheme?
Being myself is something I donโt find difficult, nor is being open to change. I have many faults but a fixed mindset isnโt one of them โ I once moved to Scotland with a fortnightโs notice and abandoned a PhD halfway through because something else was more pressing. But having a lack of ambition is not always a good thing โ as evidenced by the fact that my film will probably never be produced.
Safe mode versus growth mode
โPeople can feel aimless or like theyโre coasting,โ says Burke. โThey might think theyโre not
achieving their potential. One of my lecturers once said humans are either in safe mode or growth mode. I think thereโs a time for both โ itโs about knowing whether to take risks or batten down the hatches and stay as you are.โ
โSometimes, it can be wonderful and transformative to be working towards big goals,โ says Eve Menezes Cunningham, self-care coach and author of 365 Ways To Feel Better (White Owl, ยฃ12.99). โIf itโs a matter of going with the flow and loving the journey, how wonderfulโฆ but if weโre feeling stumped and thwarted, we should reassess and put plans in place.
โThe more we can appreciate however we are feeling, instead of thinking we should be doing more, or less, the more we can tune into what we genuinely want for ourselves. By connecting with our inner wisdom, instead of being swayed by trends and othersโ opinions, we can enjoy life more at every stage and relax into that sense of flow and trust in it all working out.โ
Do we need ambition?
Perhaps, in my moseying-along state, Iโve reached an enviable nirvana where Iโm not constantly striving for something unattainable. Or perhaps Iโm jeopardising my future happiness by refusing to codify my desires.
Either way, I think Iโm going to check in with myself now and then about what it is that I truly want from life, to ensure my aimless existence is still one I am completely comfortable with.
Finding the balance between living and planning
Coach Eve Menezes Cunningham says our ambitions are constantly evolving and thatโs a positive thing. โRecognising that something you once wanted no longer appeals means youโre able to explore new goals, if you want,โ she says.
These are her tips on how to strike the balance between coasting aimlessly and planning yourself into oblivion:
Goal-driven? How do your ambitions make you feel?
- – When you think about your goals, what emotions come up? Are you excited and energised, or overwhelmed?
- – How does it feel to look at your list of goals or vision board? Connect with your body โ how do you feel as you consider each element?
- – We have so much wisdom available to us if we pay attention to our bodies. If something you were striving for feels heavy, maybe itโs time to move on.
Are you floating aimlessly with no ambition?
- – Maybe you have not connected with any goals for a while. Would you like to move towards something or are you happy as you are? Do you have a goal? (It does not have to be a lofty one!)
- – How does it feel to imagine yourself with your goal realised more easily and enjoyably than you thought possible?
- – What are you aware of as you connect with your senses and imagine a new reality? What do you see, hear, say to yourself and feel? Finally, what are your strongest emotions and sensations?
Get the balance right
We need to do more than dream to make our goals real but cutting ourselves some slack is important, too. If striving is your default, how might you let things gently unfold? If you feel adrift, how might you identify your goals and take action? Experimenting with both styles will give you flexibility in the future.
Words: Hazel Davis | Images: Shutterstock