Everyone Is Happy Somewhere, and That’s Enough Everyone Is Winning a Different Race, and None of Us Know the Finish Line I once believed there was a correct way to live life, like a secret formula hidden somewhere between a motivational quote and a financial planning spreadsheet. You know the kind. Graduate on time, find a stable job, build a respectable career, buy a house, and somehow look calm while doing all of it. It sounded reasonable when I was younger, which only proves that I had not yet met enough people to ruin that illusion. One of those people is Hendra. Hendra and I grew up together in rural West Kalimantan, a place where ambition often travels no further than the nearest rice field. His parents were landowners, and their land was tended by tenant farmers who worked under the quiet agreement that Hendra’s future would never involve financial anxiety. At seventeen, while I was still negotiating with my parents about pocket money, Hendra was driving ...