Is “lifestyle” a destination we reach, or a map we’ve been reading upside down?
For most of us, the word “lifestyle” brings up images of private jets, designer clothes, and expensive dinners. We are told that if we work hard enough, we will eventually “arrive” at a life that looks like a movie. But most of what we call lifestyle is actually a collection of stormy myths that keep us from the peace of the open sea.
It is time to dispel the noise, fix the foundation, and finally gut the truth about what it means to live well.
We need to stop looking at the shiny surface and start looking at the roots. Let’s uncover the truth and dispel some myths about lifestyle.
Misconception 1: It’s All About Luxury
Many people believe lifestyle is all about flaunting luxury and bragging about their possessions. We have been trained to think that our value as human beings is tied to the price tag on our shoes or the brand of our car. We post photos of our latest purchases, hoping for a “like” to prove that we are doing well.
However, lifestyle is more than just material possessions.
If you stripped away everything you owned today, what would be left?
Your lifestyle is actually the “how” of your life, not the “what.”
It is a way of life; it’s about the way we live, what choices we make, and how we prioritize our well-being. A person can live in a mansion and have a “poor” lifestyle because they are stressed and lonely. Meanwhile, someone in a small cottage can have a “rich” lifestyle because they are healthy and connected.
Misconception 2: Perfection and One Size Fits All
In our digital age, we are constantly bombarded with images of “perfect” routines. We see influencers waking up at 4:00 AM, drinking green juice, and working out in perfect sunlight.
This creates a dangerous idea: that there is a “perfect” lifestyle that everyone should follow.
But that’s far from the truth! Lifestyle is unique to each person, as we all have different preferences, cultures, and backgrounds. What brings me energy might make you feel drained. What works for a person in a busy city might not work for someone in a quiet village.
We have to stop trying to fit into someone else’s mold. In fact, the most important rule to remember is this: a perfect lifestyle is one that does not appear in your social media status and reels. Real life happens when the camera is off. It’s the messy, quiet, and unpolished moments that actually define our happiness.
Misconception 3: Money is Happiness
This is perhaps the loudest myth of all. People often link lifestyle to happiness, assuming that more money means a better lifestyle. We think that if we just had ten percent more income, all our problems would vanish.
Yet, studies show that money doesn’t bring happiness in the way we think it does. In fact, beyond a certain amount of money, there is no change in the happiness one can get. Once your basic needs—like food, housing, and safety—are met, the extra money doesn’t actually make your brain feel more joy.
Often, it does the opposite. It adds more complexity, more bills, and more things to worry about. We spend our health gaining wealth, only to spend that wealth later trying to buy back our health.
The Real Meaning: Habits and Choices
If lifestyle isn’t about luxury or money, what is it? Fact 1: It’s about habits and choices. Lifestyle is about the habits we form and the choices we make daily. It is the small, boring things that happen every single day.
Eating nutritious food, being physically active, a relaxed mind, and enough sleep contribute to a healthy lifestyle. These are the four pillars. You cannot buy a healthy body; you have to build it with your daily decisions. When you choose to take a walk instead of sitting on the couch, or choose water over soda, you are designing your lifestyle.
These choices are the “map” that either leads you toward a calm sea or into a storm.
The Importance of Mental Well-being
We live in a world that praises “the hustle.” We are told to work until we drop. Because of this, people are busy trying to live a perfect lifestyle and often end up ignoring mental wellness. We chase the promotion or the bigger house, but we lose our minds in the process.
In simple words, lifestyle is about “being at peace,” something that eludes us.
We have forgotten how to be still. Engaging in activities we love, spending time with loved ones, and relaxation has a positive impact on our overall lifestyle. If you have a million dollars but cannot sit quietly in a room for ten minutes without feeling anxious, you are not living well. Peace is the ultimate luxury.
The Evolution Toward Simple
One of the most beautiful things about life is that we are allowed to change. Lifestyle changes with time and circumstances. As we grow older or experience life events, our priorities and choices change.
When we are young, we want excitement and “more.” But as we gain wisdom, we realize that “more” is often just “noise.”
Often the change is in the form of going “simple” on all aspects of life. We start to value a quiet morning more than a loud party. We start to value a few deep friendships more than a thousand “followers.”
Going simple isn’t about giving up; it’s about clearing away the clutter so we can see what actually matters.
Conclusion: The Truth About the Means
We must be careful with how we handle our resources. Beyond a certain limit, money becomes a stress that needs management. Be assured that when you outsource your money management, it brings with it more sleepless nights. When you have too much, you stop owning your things, and your things start owning you.
We must remember the hierarchy of life. Lifestyle is about healthy food, activities that relaxes the mind and body, activities that improves relationships, and a good sleep. Everything else is a means of achieving these. Money is just a tool to buy the food and the time for sleep. Work is just a way to provide for the relationships.
If the “means” are destroying the “ends”—if your job is ruining your sleep or your money is ruining your peace—then the map is upside down.
Let’s turn it back around. Let’s focus on the foundation.
Cheers for wellness & wellbeing.
I’ll catch you later
Be First to Comment