Curating Local Meaning: The OASIS Approach to Living
Life may lack inherent meaning, but by curating an appropriate portfolio of engagements, I can look forward to rising each day with anticipation.
Looking forward to getting up in the morning with anticipation, enthusiasm, and vigor is a litmus test for living well
Summary: Even if my life may not have an inherent meaning, I can still create local meaning through deliberate engagement and make my ephemeral journey a string of days that I look forward to living.
It is not difficult to argue that the universe — and my life within it — lacks a predetermined meaning. All I need to do is look around and observe the role of randomness: how quickly the trajectory of life can shift or collapse, how forecasts in weather or finance broaden with time, how the course of evolution might easily have taken a different turn in which I would not exist.
If such small perturbations can yield radically different outcomes, it is hard to claim that I possess any inherent meaning and purpose. And yet here I am, a conscious being, compelled to ask questions — not only about the meaning of the universe, but about the meaning of my own place within it.
I ask the question because without an overarching meaning and purpose, living through the days of personal existence can easily become burdensome chore. Routines and activities begin to feel stripped of narrative, hollow in their repetition. To counter this, a local meaning can ease the weight of living. It can provide a thread of coherence, a reason to rise in the morning, and a story to live rather than endure.
How might I construct a local meaning and purpose for my life? The answer I seek must be pragmatic — something that can weave itself into the necessities and pressures of modern living yet remain simple enough to be understood and practiced by many. Perhaps it could resemble religion in its accessibility but be grounded in reason rather than just faith.
An answer is that the purpose of my life is simply to live the life that the unfolding of the universe has made possible for no apparent meaning and purpose. And if living itself is the purpose, then why not fill my days with activities that make me look forward to getting up in the morning with anticipation, enthusiasm, and vigor? Could there be any reason not to strive for this goal?
Local Meaning and the Litmus Test
“Looking forward to getting up in the morning with anticipation, enthusiasm, and vigor” becomes a litmus test for whether the activities I engage in are the right ones for making my life meaningful. To know that the trajectory of life is sound, building and curating a portfolio of engagements that makes life meaningful is, therefore, what I seek. Such a portfolio is far more promising than filling my days with activities that render the act of rising from bed a burden.
Imagine waking each morning only to drag myself to go to a job I dislike, or confronting the distasteful prospect of sixteen waking hours stretched before me with no clear sense of how to inhabit them. And then imagine repeating such morning day after day, ad nauseam. That alternative does not resemble a life worth looking forward to; it is precisely what the portfolio of meaningful engagements is meant to guard against.
The Framework
So now I have the litmus test to assess the orbit of my life. One additional tool I need to make my life meaningful is a framework that can help me fill my portfolio of engagements with appropriate activities.
The guiding principle for doing so is simple: find activities that fit the contours of what I value. How do I know what I value? By noticing what keeps me engaged. Doing them makes me stay with them. They bring me into a state of flow. They feel natural and effortless. I do not hesitate to return to them. Having them on the next day’s agenda makes me look forward to getting out of bed with anticipation.
The portfolio of engagements can be built through a few guiding steps:
- Observe: Notice what activities absorb me, where time dissolves, effort feels light, and an urge for returning to them feels natural.
- Align: Ensure the activities resonate with what I value — creativity, learning, or maintaining physical wellbeing.
- Sustain: Choose activities that can be woven into daily life and can be sustained.
- Iterate: Revisit and refine activities as circumstances shift.
- Savor: The activities that make me anticipate tomorrow’s agenda with delight; if an activity makes me savor the idea of waking up, it belongs.
This is the principle of OASIS — Observe, Align, Sustain, Iterate, Savor. The philosophy here is pragmatic existentialism. Life has no inherent meaning, but using my agency, I can create a local meaning through deliberate engagement. By curating a portfolio of engagements, I can thread coherence into the chaos, narrative into the randomness, joy into what could be burden.
Living the Gift of Another Day
The universe did not intend for me to be here. But here I am. And if I am here, why not live with meaning and purpose? Why not fill my days with activities that make me look forward to waking up?
To know if I am doing that, the litmus test is simple: each morning, do I rise with anticipation, enthusiasm, and vigor? If yes, my life is good. If not, it is time to revisit my portfolio of engagements.
Ciao, and thanks for reading.



