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I spent forty years chasing everything they told me would make me happy. Work hard, pay off the house, raise good kids, save for retirement. Check, check, check, and check.
So why the hell am I sitting here at 5:30 in the morning, staring at my coffee, feeling like I’m drowning in my own success?
The mortgage is gone. The kids are doing great—better than great, actually. My marriage is solid after forty-four years. The retirement account is full. I have everything I was promised would make me happy.
And I feel completely empty.
That’s the part nobody warns you about. The loneliness of getting everything right and still feeling like something’s missing. You can’t explain it to anyone because what are you going to say?
“I achieved all my goals and now I’m miserable”? People would think you’re ungrateful. Or crazy. Or both.
But here’s what I’m learning: Sometimes the emptiness isn’t because something’s wrong. Sometimes it’s because you spent so long building toward something that you never figured out what comes after you get there.
The checklist was supposed to be enough
Growing up, the formula was simple. Get a trade, get married, buy a house, have kids, work your ass off, retire comfortable. That was it. That was the whole plan.
And I followed it to the letter. Started as an apprentice electrician at eighteen, straight out of high school. Met my wife at a county fair when we were twenty. She beat me at the ring toss and I knew I was done for. We got married, bought a little house, had two kids.
For forty years, I got up before dawn, went to work, came home tired. I built my business wire by wire, job by job. I missed things—my son’s high school graduation rehearsal still stings when I think about it.
But I was doing what I was supposed to do. I was providing. I was building something.
The checklist kept me moving. Pay off the car. Save for college. Fix the roof. Build the business. Each goal led to the next one. There was always something to work toward.
Then one day, I looked around and realized I’d checked every box.
Now what?
Nobody tells you what happens when you finish the list. When there’s nothing left to chase. When you wake up and realize you got everything you wanted, but you don’t know what you want anymore.
Success doesn’t come with instructions
Here’s something I’ve figured out: We’re really good at teaching people how to build things. How to work toward goals. How to sacrifice now for something better later.
We’re terrible at teaching people what to do when they get there.
I know how to wire a house. I know how to run a business. I know how to work seventy-hour weeks and push through when I’m exhausted. But sitting still? Being satisfied? Having enough? I never learned that.
My whole identity was wrapped up in being useful. In solving problems. In having something to fix. Take that away, and who am I?
A guy with a paid-off house and no idea what to do with himself.
The weird part is, from the outside, my life looks perfect. And it is, kind of. My wife and I are good. The kids are thriving in their own lives.
Money isn’t a problem. But that almost makes it worse. You feel guilty for feeling empty. Like you’re being ungrateful for everything you have.
I can’t go to my buddies and complain about this. What am I going to say? “Hey guys, I’m really struggling with having everything I ever wanted”? They’d laugh me out of the diner.
The work was never just about the work
Looking back, I think I was chasing more than just financial security. The work gave me purpose. It told me who I was every morning. It gave me problems to solve, people to help, something to build.
When you’re an electrician, people need you. Their lights don’t work, their outlet’s sparking, their renovation is stalled. You show up, you fix it, you’re the hero. There’s satisfaction in that. Real, immediate satisfaction.
Retirement doesn’t have that. Nobody needs me to get up at 5:30 anymore. Nobody’s waiting for me to solve their problem. My wife doesn’t need me to provide—we’re all set. My kids don’t need my advice—they’re doing fine on their own.
The absence of being needed is its own kind of loneliness.
I spent so many years believing that men don’t talk about feelings. We just work. We provide. We fix things. That’s how we show love. That’s how we matter.
Unlearning that has been the hardest project of my life. Harder than any rewiring job, any business challenge, any financial goal.
Because it means admitting that maybe the work was never really about the money or the success. Maybe it was about feeling like I mattered.
Finding meaning after the finish line
So what do you do when you’ve crossed all the finish lines and you’re still standing there, wondering what’s next?
I don’t have it all figured out. But I’m learning some things.
First, it’s okay to feel empty even when your life is full. It doesn’t make you ungrateful. It makes you human. We’re not built to just stop. We need purpose, challenge, something to work toward.
Second, maybe it’s time to write a new checklist. Not one about accumulating things or achieving milestones, but about experiences, connections, things that feed something deeper than your bank account.
My wife bought me a journal as a joke when I retired. Figured I needed something to do with my hands. Turns out, writing helps. It gives me a place to put all these thoughts that I never learned how to talk about.
It’s not the same as rewiring a house, but it’s something.
I’m also trying to be useful in different ways. Teaching younger guys the trade. Helping neighbors with small projects. Not for money, just to feel that satisfaction of solving a problem again.
The emptiness is still there some mornings. I don’t think it ever fully goes away. But I’m learning to sit with it instead of running from it. To recognize it as part of the deal when you spend your whole life chasing something and then actually catch it.
That’s it
If you’re sitting in your success feeling empty, you’re not broken. You’re not ungrateful. You’re just human.
We spend so much time climbing the mountain that we don’t think about what happens when we reach the top. The view is great, sure. But then what? You can’t just stand there forever.
Maybe the answer isn’t to find another mountain. Maybe it’s to learn to appreciate the view while also accepting that the climbing was part of what made you feel alive.
I don’t have all the answers. Hell, I’m just figuring out the questions. But I know this: The emptiness you feel in the middle of your success is real, even if you can’t explain it to anyone else.
And maybe that’s okay. Maybe that’s just what happens when you’re done becoming and you have to figure out how to just be.
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