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Description

Most people think they’re making thoughtful, intentional decisions about their lives.

But what if many of those decisions are actually being driven by ideas you’ve never consciously examined?

In this episode, Jonathan and David pick up on themes from last week’s conversation and explore one of the most powerful hidden forces shaping our lives: the invisible assumptions behind how we measure success.

Why do so many life decisions revolve around career, income, and opportunity? Why does the question “What do you want to do with your life?” almost always get answered with a job title?

The problem isn’t that work or money matter. They obviously do. The problem is when economic success quietly becomes the default metric that determines where we live, how we make decisions, and what we believe a “good life” looks like.

Instead of chasing the wrong scoreboard, Jonathan and David explore a different approach: consciously examining the ideas that drive your decisions—and learning to structure your life around priorities rather than metrics.

Topics We Explore

Metrics vs. Mission

One of the key ideas in the conversation is that metrics are not inherently bad.

Numbers can be helpful tools. They can help us track progress, stay disciplined, and make practical decisions.

The problem happens when the tool becomes the goal.

When that happens, we stop pursuing the deeper purpose and start optimizing the measurement instead.

A spreadsheet meant to track spiritual discipline can slowly turn into a scoreboard for holiness.

A career meant to support your family can quietly become the primary measure of your worth.

The metric was supposed to serve the mission—but instead it replaces it.

The Power of Priorities

So if life isn’t meant to be driven by metrics, what should guide our decisions?

Jonathan suggests a helpful framework: priorities.

Rather than asking:

What will make me the most successful?

You might ask:

For example, many Christians would broadly agree on priorities like:

  1. Faithfulness to Christ
  2. Care for family
  3. Commitment to community and church
  4. Faithfulness in vocation

But how those priorities play out can look very different depending on the person, the family, and the life stage.

Two people may both prioritize family—and still make opposite decisions about a job move.

And that doesn’t necessarily mean one of them is wrong.

Living Fully Awake

The deeper challenge here is awareness.

Many people go through life reacting to circumstances or following cultural expectations without ever questioning the ideas behind their choices.

But living intentionally means slowing down long enough to ask:

What assumptions are shaping my decisions?

Once those ideas become visible, you can begin evaluating them—testing them against Scripture, wisdom, and calling.

And from there, you can begin making decisions with clarity rather than defaulting to the culture’s definitions of success.

If you’re interested in conversations like this—where faith, vocation, responsibility, and real life intersect—we’d love for you to explore what we’re building at Be Unbound. Through programs, experiences like Ridgeline, and the broader Unbound community, we’re working to help people live thoughtful, responsible, mission-driven lives.

Thanks for listening.

Thanks for thinking with us.

And as always,

Be Unbound.