Did you also feel like finding meaning and purpose was a little harder when you graduated university?

In university, you are surrounded by the most intelligent, hard working, civil, and charming professors in the world, the most ambitious students you could possibly find, and the most devout religious people on the face of the earth, if you are a religious studies major.

But once you graduate, you have to create your own inspiration, your own purpose, your own leaders, your own mission, your own excellence, your own guidance, your own ambition, your own opportunity, and your own social networking chances, so it might be a little harder to engage with the same elite and amazing ideas you did in school, especially if you are self-employed like me and 99% of your job happens in total isolation without social feedback from others.

I know many people work in groups, but I do not trust or like the people I could potentially work with, so I choose to operate in isolation.

Did you also feel like finding meaning and purpose was a little harder when you graduated university?
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