I guess you could say being directionless is sort of a good thing, because it indicates that you have achieved your goals. If you don't have a clear path forward, you are fine where you are, right? Or, at least, something's not behind you, goading you forward.
The other side of that, though, is that the rest of your life looks like kind of a "big, empty hole of nothing," like this guy said in the classic YouTube video, "Knock Knock." To use a Sam Harris-ism, it's actually worse than that (I have heard others use that construction before, I guess, but I attribute it to him), because here you are. You are still here, and the life goes on.
Now, the title of Drake's More Life always, even after hearing it said in a reading of The Science of Getting Rich, sounded like just what I felt about it: What's the point? More life? Okay, so there's more of it. Great.
So, now you have more life. What is that gonna do? If you planned your life well, or even just navigated it in a way that resulted in good relationships, a decent amount of money, a job or some way of making money (if you're a man; if you're a woman, I would say it's totally reasonable, and even preferable, for you to not have a job, because then you're just paying a nanny to do your job, but, anyway; that's only if you are married or otherwise together, with someone, and most likely, in this world, you are not, anymore), or some way of getting resources, because, as Alan Watt said in a recent Redux episode of Cutting through the Matrix, at least as translated from the audio by Melissa, money is the root of all evil. It's not the love of money, or some Mandela effect bullshit like that (not to say there is no Mandela effect, but to say that could be one), but it's money; so, if you don't have money, you're also not funding the killing of babies here, the killing of people overseas, the continued movement of the government; if you don't have money, you're actually helping by not hurting, but, anyway.
Point being, if you have set up your situation in a way where you have (A) resources, (B) a way to continue getting them that you like or don't dislike, or just have enough resources forever, somehow, (C) a relationship, romantically, if you want that, (D) a group of friends, if you want those, (E) a family relationship, if you want that, etc.—if you are a self-sustaining person who has something to look at and say, "This is a valuable experience and not just misery, for me," then great. But, if you don't have that?
What's the point.
Purpose is a way of having more life, and fulfilling because it is personal and involving. It's also up to you.