Between deadlines and daydreams
I used to think that love and career existed on opposite ends of a seesaw—when one goes up, the other has to go down. It is what I often heard growing up: “Focus on your studies first.” “You can’t build a future if you’re distracted.”
Adults uttered them with the conviction of people who had been burned before. So, I followed the rule. I buried myself in schoolwork, chased grades, collected certificates, and convinced myself that love could wait—that it was something to be earned after success.
But as I grew older, I realized that life does not unfold as neatly as we plan it. Some of the most important things happen when we least expect them—not in the spaces we reserve for them, but in the moments we do not see coming.
I met someone who did not arrive as a distraction but as a quiet constant—the kind of person who did not ask me to choose between ambition and affection, but taught me that love could exist alongside the grind.
We were both in the middle of building our own worlds. There were deadlines, exams, and the endless pressure to “make it.” Yet in between the rush, we found time for simple things—coffee before class, late-night conversations about where we wanted to be five years from now, or how tired we both were but still hopeful. Love was not a grand event. It was the calm we returned to after a long day of trying to prove ourselves.
Adulthood has a way of testing that calm. Somewhere between job applications and responsibilities, I began to understand what growing up truly means—not just paying bills or showing up to work on time, but carrying both dreams and doubts in the same pocket. It means learning that success does not come all at once. It arrives slowly, sometimes disguised as exhaustion, sometimes as quiet progress no one else notices.
There were nights when I questioned everything. Was I doing enough? Was I falling behind? I would scroll through social media and see people my age already “there”— building careers, traveling, achieving things that made me wonder if I had missed a turn somewhere. It is so easy to compare, especially when everyone seems to be moving faster. But then I would remember something my partner once said: “You are not late. You are just on your own timeline.”
That sentence grounded me. It reminded me that life is not a race—it is a collection of moments, and each person has their own rhythm. Some people bloom early; some take time to grow roots. The important thing is to keep growing.
I have learned that love and career are not enemies. They are, in many ways, reflections of the same pursuit—the desire to build something lasting, to pour ourselves into something that gives meaning to our days. Love teaches patience, empathy, and resilience—the very qualities that make us better in our work. A career teaches discipline, purpose, and perseverance—the very traits that keep love grounded when life gets tough.
There are days when I still feel lost. When the future seems like an endless question mark, and the path ahead blurs with uncertainty. But I have stopped seeing uncertainty as failure. It is simply the space where growth happens. To grow up is to realize that not everything has to be figured out; sometimes, it is enough to keep trying, to keep showing up, and to keep believing that we will get there eventually.
Love helps with that. It is not the fairy-tale kind—not always fireworks or grand gestures—but the kind that holds your hand through the quiet, tired parts of life. It is knowing that even when things do not go as planned, there is someone who believes in your “someday.”
As I look ahead, I no longer see love and career as a balancing act but as two parts of the same story. The deadlines and daydreams can coexist. The person I love does not pull me away from my goals; she reminds me why those goals matter. And when life gets heavy, when work feels endless and the world feels too loud, it is love—steady, patient, and real—that brings me back to center.
Maybe that is what growing up really is: learning to live in the middle—between ambition and affection, between where we are and where we hope to be. It is understanding that fulfillment does not come from choosing one over the other, but from letting both shape us.
Someday, when I look back, I hope I remember these years not as the time I had it all figured out, but as the time I learned how to keep going. To build a life not just of achievements, but of meaning. To chase success without losing softness. To love without losing myself.
Between deadlines and daydreams, I am still learning—and that is enough for now.
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Percival Diokno, 28, works in the Department of Justice. He writes about love, purpose, and the quiet lessons of growing up. When not at work, he finds peace in coffee, long walks, and honest conversations.

