"Make your goals big and broad enough so that they never become answered prayers and boomerang to curse you"
About this Quote
Coupland’s line reads like a self-help mantra that’s been put through a paper shredder and reassembled with a warning label. The jab is at the fantasy of closure: the idea that if you want something badly enough, getting it will deliver peace. He frames goals as “answered prayers,” borrowing religious language to mock how modern ambition often functions as private devotion. You build a shrine to a future version of yourself, then act surprised when the deity shows up with fine print.
The “boomerang” image is doing heavy work. It suggests that goals don’t just fail; they return, weaponized, because the conditions that made you crave them don’t disappear when you obtain them. The promotion you begged for becomes a surveillance system of expectations. The dream city turns into a rent trap. The relationship you “manifested” becomes a mirror for your unresolved habits. Coupland’s subtext is less “don’t want things” than “don’t design desires that can be completed,” because completion invites reckoning.
Contextually, it fits his long-running obsession with late-capitalist spirituality: a culture that replaces religion with branding, therapy-speak, and curated aspiration. Big, broad goals aren’t about grandiosity; they’re about keeping your aims elastic enough to grow with you, not fossilize you. He’s arguing for ambitions that function like direction rather than destination - less wish fulfillment, more ongoing practice. That’s the twist: the safest prayer is the one that can’t be “answered” in a way that shrinks your life.
The “boomerang” image is doing heavy work. It suggests that goals don’t just fail; they return, weaponized, because the conditions that made you crave them don’t disappear when you obtain them. The promotion you begged for becomes a surveillance system of expectations. The dream city turns into a rent trap. The relationship you “manifested” becomes a mirror for your unresolved habits. Coupland’s subtext is less “don’t want things” than “don’t design desires that can be completed,” because completion invites reckoning.
Contextually, it fits his long-running obsession with late-capitalist spirituality: a culture that replaces religion with branding, therapy-speak, and curated aspiration. Big, broad goals aren’t about grandiosity; they’re about keeping your aims elastic enough to grow with you, not fossilize you. He’s arguing for ambitions that function like direction rather than destination - less wish fulfillment, more ongoing practice. That’s the twist: the safest prayer is the one that can’t be “answered” in a way that shrinks your life.
Quote Details
| Topic | Goal Setting |
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