At fifty-eight, boredom went unrecognized—not the restless kind that craves activity, but the deeper sort that settles in once you’ve done enough, seen enough, and nothing surprises you anymore. Life was good, comfortable even. Unhappiness wasn’t the issue. Excitement simply wasn’t there. Days passed in quiet routine, spent waiting for something to happen. Yet nothing would arrive on its own. It was waiting for me to make the move.
I thought excitement was for young people. For people who hadn’t done it all yet. I’d done it. I’d built a career. Raised a family. Made the money. Bought the house. I’d done what I was supposed to do. Now what? That was the question I didn’t know I was asking. I was living the answer: nothing. Just more of the same. The same routines. The same patterns. The same life I’d been living for decades. It was fine. It wasn’t exciting.
The shift didn’t come from outside. It came from inside. A decision. A change in how I saw things. Not a new job. Not a new relationship. Not a big move. Just a shift. I stopped waiting for life to excite me. I started paying attention to what already did. I stopped looking for what was missing. I started noticing what was already there. That was the shift. That was the thing that made me excited about life again.
What I was missing
I was missing the small things. The morning light. The sound of my wife’s laugh. The way my coffee tasted when I actually paid attention. I was going through the motions. I wasn’t tasting. I wasn’t hearing. I wasn’t seeing. I was doing. That’s not the same as living.
I was missing the new things. I’d stopped learning. Stopped trying. Stopped being bad at things. I was comfortable. Comfort is the enemy of excitement. I was comfortable. I was bored. I didn’t know the two were connected.
I was missing myself. I’d been performing for so long. Being what I was supposed to be. Doing what I was supposed to do. I’d lost track of what I actually wanted. What actually excited me. I didn’t know I’d lost it. I thought I just wasn’t the kind of person who got excited anymore. I was wrong.
The shift
I started paying attention. To the small things. The things I’d been walking past for years. The taste of my coffee. The feel of the sun. The sound of the rain. I’d been living in my head. I moved into my body. Into the world. Into the present. That was the first shift. The shift from thinking to noticing.
I started doing things I was bad at. Things I didn’t know how to do. Things I had no talent for. I started learning Spanish. I was terrible. That was the point. Being terrible is exciting. It’s new. It’s uncomfortable. It’s alive. I’d spent decades being good at things. Good is boring. Terrible is exciting. I learned to be terrible. Willingly. Deliberately. It woke me up.
I started saying yes to things I would have said no to. Not big things. Small things. A walk in a new neighborhood. A class in something I knew nothing about. A conversation with someone I didn’t know. I’d been saying no for years. No to new. No to different. No to uncomfortable. I started saying yes. Not to everything. To the things that scared me a little. That interested me. That made me feel something.
I started listening to myself. What did I actually want? Not what was I supposed to want. What did I want? I didn’t know at first. I had to pay attention. To what gave me energy. What drained me. What made me feel alive. What made me feel dead. I listened. I started choosing based on what I heard.
What I found
I found excitement in small things. The first sip of coffee. The way the light hit the wall. The sound of my wife laughing at something I said. These things had been there all along. I just wasn’t paying attention. I was looking for big things. Dramatic things. Things that would shake me awake. The small things were already there. They just needed me to notice.
I found excitement in learning. In being bad at something. In not knowing what I was doing. I’d spent so long being competent. Being good. Being in control. Being out of control was exciting. Being new was exciting. Being terrible was exciting. I didn’t know I missed that feeling. I missed it for decades.
I found excitement in connection. Real connection. Not the performative kind. The kind where you let someone see you. The kind where you see them. I’d been protecting myself for so long. Keeping people at a distance. Not letting them see the real me. I started letting them see. It was terrifying. It was exciting. It was alive.
I found excitement in myself. The person underneath the performance. The person who liked things I’d forgotten I liked. Who wanted things I’d forgotten I wanted. Who was curious and playful and not yet done. That person was there. The whole time. I just wasn’t listening.
What I stopped
I stopped waiting. For something to happen. For something to change. For someone to come along and make life exciting. I was waiting for life to happen to me. Life was waiting for me to happen to it. I stopped waiting. I started doing.
I stopped performing. For my family. For my friends. For the world. I stopped trying to be who I was supposed to be. I started being who I was. It was terrifying. It was freeing. It was exciting. The performance was exhausting. Being is alive.
I stopped saying no. To new things. To uncomfortable things. To things that scared me a little. I’d been saying no for years. No to risk. No to uncertainty. No to being bad at things. I started saying yes. Not to everything. To the things that made me feel something. That woke me up. That reminded me I was alive.
What I’d tell you
If you’re bored, stop waiting. The excitement isn’t coming from outside. It’s waiting inside. You have to go find it. Not in big things. In small things. The things you’ve been walking past. Pay attention. Taste your coffee. Feel the sun. Listen to the rain. That’s where it starts.
If you’re comfortable, get uncomfortable. Do something you’re bad at. Learn something new. Be terrible at it. The discomfort is the excitement. The not knowing is the aliveness. Comfort is the enemy. Discomfort is the door.
If you’ve lost yourself, start listening. To what gives you energy. What drains you. What makes you feel alive. What makes you feel dead. You’re in there. Under the performance. Under the shoulds. Under the life you thought you were supposed to live. You’re there. Listen. You’ll find yourself.
What I know now
I know that excitement is not something that happens to you. It’s something you choose. Every day. In small things. In paying attention. In saying yes to what scares you a little. In being terrible at something new. In letting yourself be seen. In seeing yourself.
I know that I was the thing I was waiting for. The excitement wasn’t coming from somewhere else. It was inside. Waiting for me to notice. Waiting for me to choose it. Waiting for me to stop performing and start being.
I know that it’s never too late to be excited about life again. I was fifty-eight when I figured it out. Fifty-eight when I stopped waiting. Fifty-eight when I started paying attention. Fifty-eight when I started saying yes to being terrible. Fifty-eight when I found myself again.
I’m excited about life. Not all the time. Not in a dramatic way. In a quiet way. In a way that comes from paying attention. From being present. From doing things that scare me a little. From letting myself be seen. From being myself. That’s the excitement. That’s the thing I was missing. That’s the thing I found.
The shift was small. It didn’t come from outside. It came from inside. A decision. To pay attention. To say yes. To be terrible. To be myself. That was the shift. That was the thing that made me excited about life again.
You can make that shift too. Today. Not by waiting for something to happen. By noticing what’s already happening. Not by looking for what’s missing. By seeing what’s already there. Not by being who you’re supposed to be. By being who you are.
That’s the shift. That’s the thing that made me excited about life again. It’s waiting for you too.