In The Spotlight...
10
Steps to Escape the Job World and Create the Life You Really
Want (Step 1)
© Copyright Valerie Young,
Changing Course
INTRODUCTION
The Buddhists
call it "right livelihood." Others have referred
to it as living the "good life," not in the sense
of financial riches but in doing what you want to do
and living where you want to live.
You know you
are living the good life, says career
counselor and author
Barbara Sher when "you get up in
the morning and can’t wait to start all over again."
For some this
means going for that total career change – from accountant
to photographer, social worker to freelance writer,
marketing manager to master gardener. For these people, the good life is
when your passion also pays your way.
For
others it’s enjoying a better integration between work and
family. A lot of people love the idea of working from home
and being their own boss. Still others find themselves drawn
to the idea
of downshifting to a simpler lifestyle with fewer
possessions – and pressures.
For me,
having a life worth living is about all these things – and
more.
My vision of the good life starts with the commitment to
bring a certain intentionality to my life, to be an active
participant instead of a mere observer. Doing work
that feeds my soul is absolutely central to the equation, as
is working for myself.
My vision of the good life is reflected in
the motto I chose for Changing Course: Live Life on Purpose, Work at What You Love, and Follow Your
Own Road.
There are as
many dreams as there are people. Few, though, harness their
dream to a practical plan of action. The catalyst for
leaving my well paying corporate job to pursue my version of
the good life, was the sudden death of my mother in 1993.
Since that
time, I’ve thought a lot about what it takes to go from having
a dream to actually living it.
Through much
reading and many conversations with fellow travelers on the
road to a more meaningful work/life, I’ve discovered that
getting from "there" to "here" comes
down to a series of clearly identifiable steps:
- Get The
Point
- Get the
Picture
- Get
Passionate
- Get
Over "It"
- Get
Real
- Get
Informed
- Get
Ready
- Get
Support
- Get
Going
- Get
Gratitude
I thought you
might enjoy reading the first of the 10
Steps to Escape the Job World and Creating the Life You
Really Want. I hope the article
inspires you to explore, for yourself, what it would be like
to live a life you love.

Step 1:
Get the POINT – of Life, That Is
Gathered over
tuna sandwiches, fruit salad, and iced tea in the company
cafeteria, Tina and a group of coworkers engage in their
favorite lunch time activity – commiserating about their
jobs. Topping the agenda that day: inept management, office
politics and the latest in a seemingly constant series of
reorganizations.
Twenty
minutes has passed and Tina looks at her watch realizing
it's time to get back to work. "Well you know what they
say," she says with a deep sigh, "life sucks and
then you die." Everyone nods knowingly as they
reluctantly pick up their trays and head back to work.
The
surroundings, the menu and the "complaints du
jour" may change, but this workplace lament is echoed
every day by millions of frustrated, unhappy workers who
feel stuck in their jobs. Like Tina and her coworkers, we
shrug off our discontent and dream of retirement -- or, if
we're lucky, of hitting the lottery.
This sense of
hopelessness is not surprising really. I, like so many, had
come to believe that sacrificing our happiness, our health
and our dreams for a paycheck was some immutable law of
life. In the past few years, though, my thinking has
shifted.
Now I realize
that when our dreams are larger than our belief in our right
to pursue them, it's probably because we are missing what I
have come to think of as The Point – capital letters
intentional.
There are many reasons why so many otherwise intelligent
people miss The Point.
Much of it, I think, has to do with the commonly accepted
definition of success that says, in essence, you are what
you own. In a thoughtful analysis in Business Ethics magazine,
Dr. Sally Power speaks to the insidious cycle that keeps so
many people working long hours at the expense of all else.
From
landscaping services to in-home dog groomers to a $300
all-in-one contraption that wakes you with an alarm bell,
makes your coffee, fries two eggs and toasts your bread at
the push of a button, Americans are willing to pay for all
kinds of time-saving services and devices designed to help
us juggle our busy lives. Yet, says Power, there is a catch.
In order to afford these products and services we have to
maintain the heavy workload that makes these things
desirable in the first place.
"The
choice to consume more," writes Gary S. Cross, in his
book Time and Money "is
the choice to be more exhausted. You make a decision to have
weaker family ties, to have fewer friends."
But missing
The Point isn't always about money. Some people, it seems,
don't seem to get The Point because they operate under the
mistaken belief that they don't have THE RIGHT to pursue
their heart's content. That somehow suffering through 40
years of job misery is the price we must all pay for the
joys of retirement. This is unfortunate indeed. Because the
simple truth of the matter is, if you don't feel entitled to
go after the life you want, you're destined to keep the one
you already have.
Now I don't
pretend nor, for that matter, even aspire to
know THE DEFINITIVE POINT. I'll leave that
to those far wiser and more thoughtful than I to discern.
But I do know this much – when it comes to our final
reflection, far more of us will look back and wish we'd done
MORE in our lives than wish we'd done LESS. And I, for one,
think that's a shame.
Apparently
I'm not alone.
Recent surveys suggest that more and more people seem to be
getting The Point. Forty-six percent of Americans surveyed
by a recent Harris poll said "success" to them is
not about work and/or money but about family and/or
children. Another survey found of the top 20 considerations
in choosing a job, a position that allowed for a personal
life was rated number two, significantly higher than salary,
which was ranked sixteenth.
These
findings would not surprise trend expert Faith Popcorn, who,
in 1991, predicted a growing number of baby-boomers would be
"cashing out" of the corporate world. As Popcorn
sees it, "In the seventies, we worked to live. In the
eighties, we lived to work. Now we simply want to live –
long and well." Good Point.
Sometimes we
get The Point because our complacent world has somehow been
shaken. Change, loss, and close calls all serve as painful
reminders of just how precious and fleeting this time we
call "my life" really is.
My own personal wake-up call came when my mother died
unexpectedly at age 61. She died too young – just five
months shy of her long-awaited retirement to Florida. Losing
my mother was the hardest thing I think I've ever
experienced. Her own dreams deferred, I realized I could no
longer put my own on hold.
Perhaps, as the numbers of baby-boomers experiencing the
aging or loss of their own parents increase, they too will
begin to really get The Point.
One of the
most compelling articles I've read on this subject appeared
ten years ago in a magazine called Special Issue which
dedicated an entire edition to people who had pursued their
dreams.
In her article, "Dreams are not Enough,"
nurse-turned-writer Elizabeth Berg shares the lessons she
came to learn about the importance of following one's bliss.
Asking and then answering her own question she writes,
"What happens to our dreams? They die of lack of
nourishment, that's what. 'Later,' we say and when we turn
around, they're gone."
The turning
point for Elizabeth came while caring for terminally-ill
people in the hospital. So many of her patients, she says,
were full of regrets about places never traveled to and
dreams never acted upon. Sadly for them, The Point had been
realized too late.
Even
when we were silent together," Elizabeth explains,
"I felt those people asking me, 'What was so important
that I didn't take more risks?' 'Why didn't I understand
that my chances wouldn't be there forever?' I couldn't
answer them. I was making the same mistake they had assuming
that 8 a.m. Monday to 8 a.m. Tuesday lasted much longer than
24 hours. Their gift to me was the understanding that it
does not. It is 24 hours exactly, and 24 hours is
astonishingly brief."
Which brings
us back to The Point -- something that, in the final
analysis, almost always seems to have something to do with
the fact that life is so very short and precious. And
because, as the song goes, "we will never pass this way
again," it is up to us, and us alone, to strive to make
the most of our dreams and talents, to appreciate fully the
many gifts around us, and to bring happiness to our own
lives and to the lives of others. Or, as Elizabeth urges us,
"to fill the hours we are given with the things that
are right for us."
The risks and
rewards of living a purposeful life will be measured daily.
But when the great wrap-up party of life is near, I, for
one, wish to experience the ultimate prize of being among
the lucky few who can slip away to that Great Reward
unencumbered by regretful "what ifs."
Step one to
escaping the corporate world (or the public sector or
whatever unfulfilling circumstance you find yourself in)
requires a whole lot more than "Thank-God-It's-Friday"
gripe sessions around the water cooler. Your escape must be
a Pointed endeavor. An endeavor based on a strong sense of
purpose and a belief that you not only have the RIGHT to
control your own destiny, but in fact that the adventure of
TRULY living life on purpose is, in the end, The
Whole Point.
© Copyright Valerie Young,
Changing Course
-----About The Author------
Former cubicle dweller Valerie Young and now self-described
Dreamer-in-Residence, left the corporate world to launch
www.changingcourse.com, an online resource for people who want to find
their life mission and live it. Valerie's work/life change advise has
appeared in such publications as The [London] Guardian, The Edmonton
Sun, The Wall Street Journal, USA Weekend, Reader's Digest, Redbook, The
Dallas Morning News, the Boston Globe and the Oregonian.
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The Hardest Job I Ever Had
by Sharon Davis
I used to have a really challenging job. It was stressful and demanding, high pressure and large responsibilities.
I was really good at it too. Really, I was.
Then I became a parent.
In my old job, I was really good at delegating, training, developing and managing people….and rationalizing.
Oh, could I rationalize.
"I may have to work 60 or 70 hours a week, but I'm providing my girls with security, money for college, a comfortable life."
"Yes, I have to be out of town for a week at a time several times a year, but I'm providing a strong role model for my daughters."
I was so caught up in my role as a professional, I even looked down upon the stay at home moms. I admit it. I did.
I was a hard working, professional, career woman. And I was as misinformed as could be.
I used to say to my husband, "I could never not work. I'd go crazy. I don't want my life to be about Kool-Aid and paper towels."
What an idiot.
Then one day, I realized that something had happened to me. There wasn't really a defining moment, no earth-shattering epiphany. More like a gradual awakening. I realized that I wanted nothing more than to stay home making Kool-Aid for my girls.
It could have something to do with the fact that after having spent 5 months on bed rest while pregnant with my second child, the first thing I had to do was hire a nanny so I could jump on a plane to a week-long meeting in San Francisco.
Or, it could have been that while I was at this meeting, I was asked to go to Florida for 2 weeks to facilitate an acquisition. I wasn't really asked of course, more like assigned.
It just might have been seeing a picture of my oldest daughter on her first day of school. She was just about to go into her 1st grade classroom as Daddy had snapped the picture, and she looked so sad. And where was I? You guessed it...at a meeting.
Suddenly, all I could think about were my girls and what on earth was I thinking about leaving them in someone else's care?
So, I left my career behind; a bittersweet decision at the time, but I haven't looked back since. And in short order I realized that I had grossly underestimated the task before me.
There have been times when I wonder what has happened to all those professional skills.
Where is my patience when my 4-year-old has plugged up the toilet with her sister's rock collection? And where are my problem solving skills when I've foolishly volunteered to be the Cookie Manager for my daughter's girl scout troop and my little one keeps opening boxes of cookies and eating them? Where is my sense of diplomacy when someone makes even the least careless remark to one of my children?
It's a good thing I got all that experience in my other job before I got my promotion to stay-at-home parent.
So, to all the moms and dads who have dedicated themselves to caring for their precious children, consider this my deep bow of respect to you. You are the bravest, most important people in the world- doing the most challenging, important job in the world. It's the hardest job I've ever had.
--------------------------------
© Copyright 2001 Sharon Davis. Sharon Davis is the Mother of two girls,
the owner of 2Work-At-Home.Com
and the Editor of the site's monthly ezine, America's Home.
In her spare time she reminisces about what it
was like to have spare time.
Subscribe to her free ezine, by Clicking Here
This article may be reproduced providing it is published in it's entirety, including the author's bio. For a text version via autoresponder, send a blank email to mailto:thehardestjob@sendfree.com
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