There exists a particular kind of life — neither catastrophic nor fulfilling — that resists examination precisely because nothing about it demands attention. It is the life that registers as “fine” on every diagnostic; not terrible enough to justify dramatic action, yet hollow enough that Sunday evenings carry a quiet dread about the week ahead.
This is, one might argue, the most insidious condition a person can inhabit. Years can pass inside it (decades, even) under the protective cover of a decent job, a stable marriage, a comfortable routine, all of which arrive with the implicit instruction that gratitude is the only appropriate response.
And gratitude was present. That was the problem.
When a person is drowning, the fight to reach the surface is immediate and unmistakable. When a person is soaring, the wings spread wider on instinct. But treading water occupies a strange middle category; it can be sustained almost indefinitely, and the slow exhaustion goes unnoticed until the legs finally give out.
The trap of reasonable expectations
My thirties were a masterclass in settling for “good enough.” The marriage was not passionate, but neither was it hostile. We were roommates who shared a mortgage and occasionally had dinner together. The corporate job paid well, though I had lost count of how many Monday mornings I sat outside the office, steeling myself to walk through those doors.
Everything was reasonable. Manageable. Fine.
I remember reading Viktor Frankl’s “Man’s Search for Meaning” during that period. He wrote about how even in concentration camps, people could find purpose. Meanwhile, I had every comfort imaginable and felt nothing. The contrast haunted me.
The dangerous thing about a bearable life is that it does not force action. When things are genuinely bad, movement becomes unavoidable. When they are genuinely good, the instinct is to protect what exists. But bearable occupies a third category entirely; it is quicksand disguised as solid ground.
It bears noting how many people remain in relationships five years too long because the unhappiness never quite reaches the threshold of departure, or hold onto jobs that slowly erode their spirit because the salary is too generous to refuse.
When comfort becomes a cage
The psychologist Barry Schwartz talks about the paradox of choice, how having too many options can paralyze us. But there is another paradox that receives almost no attention: the paradox of comfort. When life is comfortable enough, the hunger for something better quietly atrophies. The very memory of wanting something fades.
I have mentioned this before, but after my divorce, I started running a solo business. Suddenly, every weakness I had hidden behind corporate structures and marital compromises was exposed. The procrastination I had perfected. The difficult conversations I had avoided. The way I had chronically said yes when I meant no.
Without the buffer of “bearable,” I had to actually deal with myself.
What shocked me most was realizing how much energy had gone into maintaining the illusion that everything was okay. The mental gymnastics required to convince oneself that mediocrity is sufficient (and to repeat that performance daily, for years) could power a small city.
The honest question is rarely asked: where exactly is the settling happening? Which conversations remain unspoken because the relationship is “fine”? Which dreams have been quietly shelved because the present situation registers as “not that bad”?
The moment everything shifted
My wake-up call came during a therapy session I had reluctantly started after the divorce. The therapist asked me to describe my perfect day. Not a vacation day or a special occasion. Just a regular Wednesday where everything went exactly how I wanted.
I sat there for ten minutes. Silent. I literally could not imagine it.
I could describe my reasonable days. My productive days. My getting-things-done days. But a day that actually excited me? I had forgotten those existed.
That was when it hit me: I had wrapped my entire identity in being productive, being married, being successful by conventional standards. I had never asked what I actually wanted. I had been so focused on checking boxes that I never questioned whether they were the right boxes.
Reading “The Denial of Death” by Ernest Becker around that time drove the point home. He argues that humans create elaborate systems to avoid confronting their mortality. My elaborate system was a life of pleasant numbness.
Breaking free from bearable
Here is what nobody mentions about leaving a bearable life: the surrounding consensus will read the departure as madness.
When the divorce was announced, the reactions were unanimous confusion. “But you guys never fight.” “You seem so compatible.” “Are you sure you are not making a mistake?” We were not making a mistake. We were finally admitting that compatibility is not the same as connection; that the absence of conflict is not the same as the presence of joy. We had become different people, and instead of growing together, we had grown parallel, like train tracks that never touch. The same response arrived when I left corporate to start my own thing — “In this economy?” “But the benefits.” “Most people would kill for your position.” They were correct, of course. Most people would. But I was no longer trying to be most people.
What finally pushed me over the edge was reading about deathbed regrets — surveys of the dying conducted with disarming honesty. Nobody said they wished they had been more reasonable. Nobody wished they had rocked the boat less. They wished they had been braver. They wished they had honored their actual desires instead of society’s expectations.
The courage to want more
The hardest part about leaving a bearable life is not the practical challenges. It is granting oneself permission to want more after already arriving at “enough.”
Gratitude is the cultural prescription, and gratitude matters. But gratitude without ambition is simply resignation wearing a more flattering mask.
After the divorce, I had to relearn how to want things. Real things. Not achievements or accolades, but experiences that produced the sensation of being alive. I had to accept that relationships require ongoing attention and investment, not merely a good foundation; that passion is not juvenile or unrealistic, but essential.
Some days, I still catch myself sliding back into bearable. It is comfortable there. Safe. But then the memory returns — another forty years of “fine” stretching out ahead — and the stomach turns.
The bottom line
Anyone reading this and feeling uncomfortable should take that discomfort seriously. Discomfort, in this context, is recognition.
An honest inventory is required. Not a comparison to people who have less, not the lens of what one should be grateful for, but the lens of what is actually felt upon waking each morning.
Is this the life one would choose if any life were available? Or is it merely the life that accumulated by default, because it was never quite bad enough to change?
The most dangerous comfort is not the kind that produces laziness or complacency. It is the kind that erases the awareness of choice; the kind that recasts the desire for more as greed, when in truth that desire is simply human.
A complete demolition of one’s life tomorrow is not the prescription. But the hard questions must begin somewhere. Because forty years of bearable is not a life. It is a holding pattern.
And we were meant to fly.












