The Meaning of Life and the Meaning in Life
We may never uncover life’s cosmic purpose, but we can still shape our own meaning — through connection, purpose, and conscious daily choices.
We may never know why we are here. But we can choose how to be here
Summary: This essay explores the distinction between the meaning of life — a metaphysical inquiry into our cosmic purpose — and meaning in life, the pursuit of personal fulfillment through daily experiences. By separating the unknowable from the actionable, we give our agency a chance to craft purpose, joy, and meaning within our finite existence.
There is a persistent tension woven into the human psych. We not merely have the need to exist (and exist without a feeling of emptiness), but we also have a deeper urge to understand what that existence is for. Simply being often feels insufficient; our consciousness complicates the matter by asking what that our being is for.
This tension crystallizes into a deceptively simple question: What is the meaning of life? That question contrasts with a different question about what would make our existence feel meaningful. To engage with these questions, however, one must first clarify their scope.
The question about the meaning of life is a metaphysical question that seeks our place within the workings of vast cosmos, and also, the meaning of cosmos itself. The other question about the meaning in life is an introspective search for feeling a purpose in the context of activities that shape the contours of our daily existence.
To conflate these inquiries is to blur the boundary between cosmic significance and personal fulfillment while we exist. By distinguishing them, we can begin a more nuanced exploration: one that considers both our existential position in the universe and whether the span between birth and death feels imbued with purpose, direction, agency, and fulfillment.
The Meaning of Life: A Cosmic Inquiry
The question of the meaning of life is old, vast, and perhaps unanswerable (and my own perspective, tilts towards that there is no inherent meaning). This question is in the domain of metaphysics, theology, and speculative philosophy. It asks: Why does life exist at all? Is there a purpose to the universe, or to human consciousness? Are we part of a divine plan, a virtual reality simulation, or an inevitable consequence of random unfolding of matter and energy within the guardrails of laws of “physics”?
The question is not entirely academic but also has practical consequences. It is the question that leads to sleepless minds or to dark thoughts at 3am in the morning when we lie awake. It drives religious devotion. It fuels existential despair about the meaning of our ephemeral existence.
To seek the meaning of life is to ask whether life has intrinsic purpose; whether there is a reason we are here that transcends our individual stories. It is a question that often leads to bafflement, or to myths, or to faith. And yet, even in its elusiveness, it constantly shapes an inner longing for resolve.
The Meaning in Life
In contrast, the meaning in life is not concerned with telos of consciousness but with our personal significance in the context of our day-to-day life. It asks: What makes this life worth living? What makes me get out of bed? Where, and in what activities, do I find joy, connection, or purpose?
This question is the realm of lived experience and whether my consciousness finds that lived experience engaging and life does not feel empty.
The meaning in life is found in the small and the specific: the thrill of creation, the connection in friendship, in sharing a glass of wine, in renting a house along the beach for a week and inviting family and friends to come over and be together. It is found in the rituals we craft, the stories we tell. It is not a question of why we exist, but of how we choose to exist. The consequences of this question exercise our agency and choices we make.
Why Distinction Matters
To confuse the two is to risk paralysis. If we wait to discern the meaning of life in the same vein as the meaning in life, we may find ourselves adrift, or worse, totally miss out on an opportunity of having a meaning in life while trying to grapple with the much tougher (or perhaps, insolvable) problem of understanding the meaning of life. But if we recognize that meaning in life can be cultivated independently in the absence of cosmic answers, instead of being paralyzed, we reclaim agency to shape its outcome.
This distinction is also cognizant and respects the diversity of human experience. Not everyone is questioning the grand narrative of existence. Some are content to just live and with finding meaning in this life. They find meaning in art, in activism, in spending time with their grandchildren. The meaning in life is not singular and is personal.
Moreover, the two inquiries can coexist. One may believe in a divine purpose and still struggle to find meaning in daily life. Conversely, one may reject metaphysical meaning and still live with a sense of profound purpose, fulfillment, and satisfcation. The meaning of life may be unknowable; the meaning in life is always reachable and something within our capabilities to create.
Cultivating Meaning in Life
Although the meaning of life is a question we may never answer, the meaning in life is something we can cultivate. Its cultivation requires recognizing what we value, a good recipe for which is to take a critical look at the totality of activities we have and evaluate which ones are engaging, or create a sense of flow, or make us get out of bed in morning. Once we know what we value, then the task is to build ourselves a portfolio of engagements that actualize what we value. Doing this exercise may help us cultivate meaning in life.
Epilogue
Ultimately, the two inquiries into meaning are not adversaries but companions. The search for life’s meaning can evoke awe, humility, and wonder — offering guidance on what truly matters and what does not. If this finite life is all there is, then what is the point of holding grudges? In building walls and refusing to open up. In not reaching out, even if it makes us vulnerable. In the light that this finite life is all we have, meaning in life is not just a distant abstraction — it becomes a quiet invitation to live more openly, more courageously.
Within those guardrails of the meaning of life, the cultivation of meaning in life can be built to offer joy, resilience, and peace.
We may never know why we are here. But we can choose how to be here. And in that choice, repeated daily, we may find a kind of meaning that does not require cosmic validation. Inherently, life may be meaningless, but it does not have to be empty.
Ciao, and thanks for reading.

