I have a habit of trying to find meaning in things.
A quiet walk. A strange mood. A cup of coffee from 7-Eleven. One odd sentence someone says in passing that probably meant nothing to them, but somehow becomes evidence in a private investigation into aging, love, God, regret, purpose, and the strange business of being alive.
Give me a slow Sunday morning and a slightly off mood, and I can spin it into a meditation on mortality before my coffee’s even cooled down. Sometimes that helps. Sometimes I wonder if I’m just showing off to myself.
Maybe not every ordinary moment needs to become proof that I am learning something.
Table of Contents
I Can Turn Almost Anything Into Meaning
I’m not saying this like it’s a terrible thing. Paying attention matters. Noticing things matters. A lot of this blog exists because I’ve tried to slow down long enough to ask what ordinary moments might be telling me.
A walk can matter. A conversation can stay with you. A dull day can reveal something you’ve been avoiding. A small kindness outside a shop can make you think about the kind of person you still want to be.
I believe that.
But there’s another side to it.
Sometimes I can take a perfectly normal mood and give it a promotion it didn’t ask for. A tired morning becomes “a season of transition.” A slow day becomes “a deeper question about meaning.” A slightly awkward conversation becomes “evidence of how disconnected modern life has become.”
A ten-minute walk for coffee somehow turns into a full internal documentary about aging, memory, and whether I’m living with enough intention.
And sometimes, halfway through one of these private little essays, I catch myself and think:
Mate. You might just need a sandwich.
Do you ever catch yourself making a normal feeling more significant than it probably is?
When Overthinking Starts Showing Off

There is a quiet vanity in being deep.
I’m not talking about the loud kind, or the look-at-me kind. It’s more subtle.
It’s the private satisfaction of being the person who notices. The one who sees the sadness under the joke. The one who spots the metaphor in the coffee cup. The one who can take an ordinary Tuesday and turn it into evidence of a richer inner life.
That sounds a bit harsh, but I think it’s true.
And I’m not pointing at other people here. I’m pointing at myself first.
There is a part of me that likes being thoughtful. Likes being reflective. Likes being the sort of person who doesn’t just go for a walk, but comes back with a paragraph.
That can be a gift.
It can also become a costume.
Somewhere between “I’m processing something real” and “I’m trying to make my ordinary life sound more impressive,” there’s a line I don’t always respect.
That’s the uncomfortable bit.
If the coffee is just coffee, the walk is just a walk, and the day is just another day, then I have to face something much plainer.
My life is sometimes small. Not bad. Not empty. Not worthless. Just small. And I still have to get on with it.
And maybe that’s the part I keep trying to decorate.
Sometimes the Body Gets There First

Not every low mood is a message from the soul.
Sometimes you slept badly. Maybe you had too much caffeine and not enough water. Maybe you’ve been indoors too long.
Or maybe you just miss someone. Not as a lesson. Not as a breakthrough. They’re just not there, and you notice.
Sometimes you’re 57, and 57 is not 27, and the body has started sending emails in a font size you can’t ignore.
I’ve had days where I’ve sat there trying to work out what was wrong with me. What it meant. What old wound had been touched. What truth was trying to rise to the surface.
Then I’ve realised I hadn’t eaten properly, hadn’t gone outside, and had spent too much time staring at a screen.
That is not a breakthrough.
That is lunch.
The mind loves drama. The body is usually more direct. It says: go outside. It says: sleep. It says: move. It says: stop pretending you are having a spiritual crisis when your neck hurts and your blood sugar is probably doing something stupid.
There’s something quite humbling about that. We like to think we’re complicated. And we are, sometimes.
But not always.
Sometimes the most honest thing I can do is stop interpreting myself and take care of the animal part of me first.
The Wounded Philosopher Trap
Pain can deepen a person.
I believe that. I’ve seen it in others, and I’ve felt it in myself. Some things break you open. Some losses change the way you see people. Some disappointments make you kinder, quieter, more careful with the hearts around you.
Pain can teach.
But it can also flatter.
That’s the part we don’t talk about as much.
Sometimes pain makes us a little too impressed with our own sensitivity. We start to believe that because we’ve suffered, we see more clearly. We become attached to being the wounded one, the thoughtful one, the one who knows what life really is underneath all the noise.

And maybe sometimes we do see things others miss.
But maybe sometimes we’re just making a mood sound more meaningful than it is.
I don’t say that to mock pain. Pain is real. Grief is real. Missing someone is real. Regret is real. But the story we build around pain is not always as pure as the pain itself.
Sometimes I’ve treated heaviness as proof that I was paying attention. Sometimes I’ve mistaken being sad for being wise. Other times I’ve let a low mood put on a long coat and pretend it was philosophy.
That’s a bit embarrassing to admit.
But probably useful.
Because if pain becomes the main thing that makes us feel interesting, we may start protecting it without meaning to. We may say we want peace, but keep returning to the familiar ache because at least we know who we are there.
That doesn’t mean we should rush ourselves or force cheerfulness. It just means not every wound deserves a shrine.
Have you ever realised an old pain had become part of how you saw yourself?
Letting Ordinary Things Stay Ordinary
I’m not giving up on meaning. That would be a bit awkward, considering half this blog is built on the idea that ordinary life is worth paying attention to.
I still believe small things matter. I still believe a walk can clear something. A song can bring you back to yourself. A kind word from a stranger can stay with you longer than expected. A quiet morning can tell you something you needed to hear.
But there is a difference between noticing and trying to squeeze meaning out of every moment like the last bit of toothpaste.

Some things are allowed to stay ordinary.
A bad mood. A boring day. Going for a walk and coming back exactly the same. A coffee that is just coffee. A restless night. A quiet hour. A moment of missing someone that doesn’t need to become a lesson about love, loss, attachment, aging, or the fragile beauty of human connection.
I don’t need every off day to become an essay. I don’t need every feeling to become a breakthrough. And I don’t need every small sadness to arrive carrying a clipboard and a teaching objective.
Sometimes the kindest thing I can do is let life be less meaningful for a while.
Not meaningless.
Just less burdened.
The coffee is coffee. The walk is a walk. The tiredness is tiredness.
And maybe letting that be enough is not a failure of depth.
Maybe it’s a small kind of freedom.
Over to You
Do you find yourself always looking for the meaning in things?
Or are you better than me at letting ordinary life stay ordinary?
Share your thoughts below. I respond to every comment, and your experience may help someone else feel a little less strange about their own.

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Grant here. I’m a British expat living in Japan, teaching English, growing vegetables, and writing honestly about aging, purpose, and figuring things out – without the BS.
This blog is where I talk about the stuff most people keep to themselves – the embarrassing truths, the questions we don’t ask out loud, and what it feels like to keep going, one ordinary day at a time.
