Khabor Wala Desk
Published: 4th April 2026, 8:45 AM
At some point in life, one reaches a peculiar juncture: a moment when the question arises, almost unbidden, whether our dreams are shrinking or our courage is waning. This question has become a recurring thought for many, yet its answer is not straightforward. Why is it that as we grow older, the ambit of our dreams often feels constricted?
A central factor lies in the increasing complexity of life’s equation. Responsibilities accumulate with age. Alongside personal ambitions, there are the obligations of family, children’s education, housing costs, commuting, medical expenses, and loans. Each new responsibility seems to occupy space that was once reserved for dreams. Society compounds this pressure by imposing normative timelines: graduate and secure a job by twenty-five, marry by thirty, have children by thirty-five, own a home by forty. Success becomes synonymous with adherence to this schedule, and deviation is implicitly discouraged.
| Age Range | Societal Expectation | Typical Pressures |
|---|---|---|
| 25–30 | Career establishment | Job security, financial independence |
| 30–35 | Marriage and family | Spouse, children, housing |
| 35–40 | Property ownership | Loans, mortgages, long-term planning |
| 40+ | Stability and provision | Health, children’s future, professional longevity |
The prescribed timeline reshapes aspirations. Individual desires often become secondary to societal expectations. The culture of comparison amplifies this effect: colleagues’ promotions, friends’ luxurious possessions, or peers’ frequent international travel create a constant reminder of perceived inadequacy. Dreams that once felt vast and expansive become safely contained, diminished by caution and fear.
Society also teaches that career risks are acceptable in youth but frowned upon in midlife. Leaving a job to start a business at thirty may be adventurous, but the same decision at forty is portrayed as reckless. The stakes are higher because failure is no longer an individual affair; it affects dependents who rely on one’s income. Consequently, security overtakes aspiration, and survival becomes a priority over ambition.
Yet dreams do not age; they shrink only when we limit ourselves. Midlife often forces individuals to undervalue their potential, despite the wisdom, maturity, and resilience that age brings. Employers, bound by convention, may reinforce this limitation, treating experience with suspicion rather than as an asset. The result is a society in which midlife individuals are caught between youthful opportunity and elderly limitation, leaving little room for the pursuit of new dreams.
This compression of aspiration has physiological and psychological consequences. Conditions such as hypertension, diabetes, heart disease, and stroke often emerge during this period, accompanied by mental health challenges, anxiety, and a pervasive sense of defeat. Yet, as Manzur Rashid Vidyut, social analyst and researcher, reminds us, life need not stall at midlife. With deliberate intention, courage, and the strategic application of accumulated experience, it is possible to reclaim space for dreams, even amidst the weight of responsibility.
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