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Meaningful Work

I Sold My Car But Not My Dream

By on February 21, 2014 in Living Your Values, Meaningful Work with 0 Comments

I sold mdriving routey car last week.  My shiny red Dodge Challenger that showed up when I quit my job.

After I quit, I drove this car down Washington State and across the corners of Oregon and Idaho, and all the way down Utah where I volunteered at the Best Friends Animal Society in Kanab for a few days.  Then I drove up through Bryce Canyon and into Colorado to spend a magical month as a writing student in Boulder.  When the month was over, I drove up through Wyoming and across Montana and Idaho, back to my home in Washington.

Each day when I got in my car for the next leg of my road trip, I started a playlist that I made for the journey.  The first song was the theme from The Dukes of Hazard.  “Straightenin’ the curves/ Flatnin’ the hills”….and neither the mountain nor the law got me in that car…not a single ticket or scrape.  That car was with me on the best adventure of my life.

The Challenger symbolized the freedom and empowerment I felt when I quit my corporate job.  It represented doing what I wanted to do, not what anyone else thought I should do.  It was about making a choice not because it was practical but because it added fun and excitement to my life.

In the book I’m writing, I do not recommend quitting your job and then buying a new car!  But I had enough savings to afford it and it was an acknowledgement of the confidence I felt.  I believed in myself enough to quit my regular paycheck and go out on my own, knowing that I would be fine.  My attitude was about saying yes to the possibilities.

It was so much fun to drive the Challenger on freeways and the open roads across the West.  It was lesWP_20130520_009s fun to drive in the cramped streets of Seattle, or to navigate around tight corners in parking garages.  Challengers are wide cars with long hoods.  This car didn’t fit in my garage at home and stayed in the driveway.

In the summer and fall it was still more fun than frustrating.  My schedule was wide open and I didn’t drive anywhere on most days.  When I did, I could take extra time to find parking spots.  Then I started a new consulting gig in January and suddenly needed to be at an office most mornings.

With the winter weather, I had to defrost the car to drive it to the office while my all wheel drive Subaru with its heated seats and rear windshield wipers was blocked behind it in the garage.  I kept the Subaru when I bought the Challenger, expecting that it was going to be temporary.  I didn’t like owning two cars; it clashed with my values of living more simply and with less consumption.

When the downsides outweighed the positive, I went to the AutoTrader website to evaluate how much the car was worth and found an option to get a price quote from local dealers who buy used cars.  I plugged in the details and got an offer that was $900 less than what I purchased the car for back in June.  I could take it to the dealership and skip the hassle of placing an ad, meeting people for test drives, and negotiating.  It was so simple that I took it as a sign that it was time to let the Challenger go.

Last week I said goodcar on road tripbye to the car.  I felt like I was taking a beloved pet to find a new home.  I had to remind myself that my best memories were from driving the car out to Boulder and back this summer, and that the car was a symbol of living more purposefully.  It wasn’t actually freedom itself.  I can still make empowering choices that make my life bigger and better.

That car represented leaving old crap behind to start a new life, and doing something that was impractical but fun and just for me.  I’m so glad I had that experience.  And I’m glad I realize I don’t have to keep the car to continue to leave old crap behind, start new adventures, and do things just because they make life more fun.

How to Cope While Plotting to Escape Your Job

I’ve done a lot of research for the book I’m writing about people leaving their jobs to pursue more meaningful work.  One of the most interesting things I learned was the various ways that people coped with their unpleasant work situations while they prepared to quit.  Here are some of the top coping strategies I heard about:

On your drive into the office each morning, turn up the volume on your car stereo and blast any song that you can yell-sing along with.  Repeat on your drive home.

Watch the 1975 movie “Rollerball”.  In it, corporations rule the word instead of countries and individualism is squashed by the puppet masters.  Marvel that the film is set in 2018.

Join a support group.  AA, a church group, a Non-Violent Communications practice group.  Anywhere where you are with trusted people that you can talk honestly about your situation.  Or go to a counselor.  Paying someone $100 to listen to you for an hour might be the best money you’re spending.

Change the settings on your smart phone so that your work email doesn’t automatically sync.  Then make a point of not checking it after you’ve left work in the evening and not until you arrive at work the next day.  And never on weekends.  They have your cell phone number, right?  If it is an emergency, they can call you.

Move the icon or tile for your work email to the very bottom of your smart phone, so you can’t see it unless you scroll down or navigate to another page.  Psychologically this is a reminder that your workplace isn’t the most important part of your life.  Put the higher priority icons or tiles at the top – your contacts, your calendar, your camera and pictures – you look at your phone multiple times a day so let it reinforce your values.

Put yourself first.  Running late in the morning?  Eat breakfast anyway.  It’s your health and your energy.  Feeling fatigued at the office?  Take ten minutes to visit with a coworker or take a walk around your building.  Don’t work at your desk during lunch unless you’re planning to leave work early to compensate.  Go sit in the cafeteria and clear your head, go run an errand, or take a nap in your car.

Download a countdown app to your phone and set it for the day that you plan to give notice.  Give the countdown a funny name that won’t tip off anyone at the office if they happen to see it.  Like “lunch with Michael Scott” (a reference to the head Dunder Mifflin’s Scranton branch from the former tv series “The Office”).  Or “Dilbert Festival”.  Or “Day of Reckoning”.  Every time you feel like screaming at your desk, take out your phone and look at your countdown.

Start taking home the things you care about from your office.  Replace them with things you don’t care about, or facsimiles of what was there before.  Like my friend who took home the photo he had on his wall but replaced it with a color photo copy.

At home, take an old cardboard box and write “This is the box I’m going to use to carry my stuff home from the office” on the inside with a black sharpie.  Put it in your closet or the trunk of your car.

Then every day when you go into the office, smile at your subversive self.

Stepping Off the Treadmill of Ambition

By on February 4, 2014 in Living Your Values, Meaningful Work with 4 Comments

I keep getting emails from Scott Dinsmore with his rallying cry question of “Are you all-in?”

No, I’m not. And I’m fine with that.

I’m editing and fine-tuning my book that I’m committed to publishing. I’m using a chunk of my savings and evenings working through a checklist of tasks to move my startup business forward. I’m spending the majority of my daytime hours on a consulting gig that I recently started, and am devoting energy into delivering top quality results for my client. I started this blog and a professional Facebook page to share my interest in the topic of meaningful work and connect with other people who want to live closer to their values. But I’m not all-in on any of this.

I’m not giving up my sleep, health, or social life because I put a higher value on my day-to-day happiness than launching my startup business faster. I’m not scheduling every half-hour of my week to maximize my productivity because it’s more important to me to have a certain amount of unstructured time. I’m not launching a professional Twitter account because I’d rather unplug from technology when I need a break and I don’t want to feel obligated to respond to tweets every few hours.

Maybe at some point I will turn more attention to these areas of my life, ramping up the hours and energy I spend on them. I might choose to be more active on social media to grow my businesses. Or I might let some activities go so that I can dedicate more effort to my highest priorities. But right now, my soul is guiding me to be a little easier on myself.

For most of my life my M.O. for success was to go all-in on every project I felt responsible for. I powered through when I was tired, sick, and when I’d rather be doing something else. This way of living started in high school, when I stayed up until 3AM if that’s what it took to complete a school project that was due the next day. Nobody encouraged me to do this – I felt compelled to turn in good assignments on time, in the same way that in my later working years I made sure that my deliverables met my bar of quality and met my deadlines.

Looking back at my career, I certainly produced a lot. When I think of the sheer volume of programs, projects, presentations, and materials that I generated in any given year, I feel more surprised than proud, because it seems like I delivered an unrealistic workload. Which is part of the problem that I’ve read and heard about so much in my book research – and I didn’t have to look very far to find it. Company employees are continuously being asked to do more with less. Layoffs happen, budgets are reduced, and the remaining employees don’t just pick up the slack – they work to continue to grow the business. Just today I had a conversation with a woman who often works until 10PM because she’s responsible for the equivalent of two full-time jobs. Like many of us, she feels compelled to give it her best effort, but she also acknowledges that it’s not how she wants to live her life.

When I lived this way it felt like I was plugged into a corporate machine. I was running on adrenaline and there was no way to shut it off. I went from working a bunch of hours in a stress-filled office to coming home late and tuning out until it was time to sleep. And I needed a lot of sleep to be able to get through the days. I know not everyone operates like this, and there are people who can leave work at work, or check out and stop caring, or find other ways to cope. I saw it all: people coping with prescription meds, booze, drugs, or by acting out.

I didn’t want to just cope; I wanted to enjoy my life every day. When I quit my job, I stepped off the treadmill. Life slowed down so much that it was a shocking adjustment to have plenty of energy and many more hours in each day than what was required to work on my book and new business. When you’re used to running at 60 MPH, walking takes some getting used to.

I’m not the only one. I read an article on Tiny Buddha by Joe Scherrer, who wrote about what it was like to step off the treadmill of ambition. In his case, it was a two-month vacation that flushed the adrenaline out of his system and showed him that there is another way of life besides striving for success all of the time. After that experience, he didn’t want to go back to a lifestyle of constantly pushing to get ahead.

I also loved reading Tara Sophia Mohr’s blog post that offers a different perspective on what successful people do before breakfast. There is so much “GO, GO, GO” pressure in American business. Being productive is a need, but it isn’t the only need. Having calm, rest, and pleasure are also needs and they are just as valid.

As much as I like Scott Dinsmore’s advice about how to live up to our dreams, I’m not going all-in at this time. So if I take a weekend off instead of posting on my professional Facebook page or going to a networking event, I get it if some people think I’m not taking the right steps to advance my goals. But I’ve had enough of running the treadmill. This time I’m walking.

It’s Not Just Time. It’s Also Energy.

I hear this all the time and you probably do, too: “I don’t have time.” It’s often the first response or excuse we think of when we don’t want to do something or think it isn’t possible.

I grew up writing stories and poems. I enjoyed it. I majored in English in college and when I wasn’t writing essays or creative pieces for school assignments, I would also write for myself. That practice continued long after I graduated. I had notebooks and PC word docs filled with stories and ideas that I created in the evenings after work or on weekends.

But as years went by I began working longer, more stressful hours at my job and writing for fun slowed down. And then stopped. I didn’t write for eight years.

Certainly the more hours I spent working meant fewer hours left for myself, but what was worse than the lack of time was the lack of energy. I was tired in every sense: physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually. My free time became about recovery, not about hobbies, having fun, and spending time with people. I needed a lot of sleep just to be able to get back up the next day or the next Monday and go to work again.

My mind and energy were so consumed by work that I didn’t have the brain-space for creative ideas. Then about the same time that I decided to quit my job, I started thinking of stories again and wanted to write about them.

One evening I dreamt a fully formed story that included a solid plot, and wrote it down as soon as I woke. As I got in bed another evening, I had an idea for a children’s book. I got out my notebook and started writing. Four hours later, I had the entire story on paper.

Other times a melody and a few words would appear in my mind and within minutes I had a page of lyrics with the musical notes that I guessed at.

Once I made up my mind to quit, energy flowed back into the parts of myself that had been neglected for too long. Becoming consumed by work robbed my creativity and self-expression. Unplugging from the corporate treadmill brought it back.

I was still working full days while I planned my departure, but my life-force was directed towards creating a healthy, happy, meaningful existence. The hours between work and sleep now had the potential to work on creative projects. When I shifted my priorities, my entire life shifted.

Savings = Options

One of the most common questions I get when people hear that I quit my corporate job is about how I was able to do it financially.  As someone put it delicately the other day, “Isn’t it uncomfortable not having an income?”  Well, yes it’s uncomfortable!  Seeing all of the money go out of the checking account instead of coming in doesn’t generate feelings of comfort.  I take deep breaths and remind myself that this was the plan.  This is what I saved for.

Well, to be accurate, I saved for this scenario; the possibility that I would be living off of my savings for an extended period of time.  When I first decided to leave my job, nearly a year before I actually left, I planned to start a business.  I did research, took training, talked to people in my chosen field, and had a marketing strategy lined up.  But as I neared my exit date a different business opportunity came up that I was even more excited about and I turned my attention in that direction.  And yet another idea was born during the month I spent at a summer writing program – I formed a solid outline of a book I wanted to write.

By August the new plan was to work on the startup and write my book, and ideally generate income from both starting January 2014.  Soon it became clear that the startup and the book were on the slow track and as I learned more about both industries, I realized that neither one were going to provide a living wage anytime soon, if ever.  But I was committed.  I had a solid start to a book and an interesting new business and wanted to see how much I could do with both of them.  Plan V4 was to treat these efforts like full-time jobs and then amp up consulting in 2014.  Thankfully I had saved enough money to make this option possible.

I’ve always been a saver but once I made up my mind that I would leave my job, I doubled-down.  I got rid of my home phone and cut cable down to the cheapest plan possible.  I would have scrapped cable TV altogether but my internet bill was less expensive bundled with TV than without.  I stopped buying things.  I didn’t shop for clothes and if there was something I saw that I thought I’d like to have, like a kitchen gadget, I just didn’t buy it.  I became fond of the saying, “Use it up, wear it out, make it do, or do without.”  My one remaining consumer habit was cosmetics.  I have a “thing” for shopping at Sephora and long after I stopped buying other stuff I didn’t need, I was still purchasing lipstick and eyeliner.  Eventually even that fell away.  When I passed up the holiday coupon for $25 off a purchase of $50 or more, I knew I’d transcended.

Alison Green of the blog www.askamanager.org wrote about the choices that savings provides in a 2011 post titled “3 Things I Learned by Quitting my Job in a Recession”.  She wrote, “I wanted to quit my job and work for myself for a lot of reasons. I was able to quit my job and work for myself for this reason: savings.  Having savings lets you act from strength, not desperation. That has huge ramifications for the decisions you’re able to make and, therefore, for your quality of life.”

If you are considering a career change, maybe this New Year is the right time to make a resolution to save extra money so that you’ll have more options.  A great place to start is by finding out how much you really spend, which is probably more than you think.  A fellow career-changer, Jennifer Lesher, told me about www.mint.com.  It’s the best budgeting tool I’ve seen so far.  It sucks your online financial data into a dashboard where you can see your total spending by category (household, auto, insurance, food, etc.).

While it doesn’t feel comfortable to make a career change that involves financial risk, it is liberating to be able to choose.  I’m happy with my choice.

I Quit My Job and the Universe Approved

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I’m a practical person.  When I decided to quit my corporate job, I was methodical in my process.  I made a plan to start my own business.  I created checklists of tasks to prepare financially and to complete major milestones at work.  I thought it would take about nine months to cross the last item off my list and then I would quit.

As I got closer and closer to the end of my list, I became happier and happier.  I reclaimed my power.  I was no longer afraid of layoffs or being penalized for speaking up for myself and what was right for the business.  I mean, what were they going to do, fire me?  Then I would have been eligible for unemployment benefits, so I felt like I couldn’t lose.

I wanted do something significant right after quitting and before diving back into business since it might be the only time in my working life between full-time jobs.  I liked writing and decided to enroll in Naropa University’s Summer Writing Program, whose version of an English department is called The Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics.  Perfect.  I started reading Kerouac’s On the Road and downloaded a countdown app to my smartphone to mark the days until I “hit the road with Jack”.

Then it was time to put in my notice, say my goodbyes, and start my new life.  I was on fire!  I felt like a bird that had been freed from a cage that it didn’t even know it was in.  Events fell into place so smoothly that a divine presence seemed to be guiding my way.  For example, I think I manifested a Dodge Challenger.  Really.  I don’t care very much about cars, but thought the General Lee from the Dukes of Hazard was cool.  I had to take my Subaru into the repair shop for a few days, and asked the rental agency if they had any Challengers to loan.  And they did.  What are the odds?  Usually they only allow requests for the class of car, but this time I got the exact make and model that I wanted: a shiny, red, 2013 Challenger.

I thought it would be fun for a few days and then I’d go back to my practical Subaru.  But this muscle car symbolized the excitement I felt about the potential my future held – and it was really fun to drive.  So I looked around for used Challengers and didn’t find any in my price range.  But I did find the exact car that I was driving advertised as a loss leader at the dealership nearest me.  The one car I wanted was on sale.  And now it’s mine!

My entire summer was like this – just magical.  On the drive to Colorado, I’d stop at a motel for the night and the receptionist would tell me, “Oh, we only have a suite left.  But I can give it to you for the price of our standard room.”  Or the café would make too much chai and give me an extra cup for free.

Once I arrived at Naropa, I loved my classes, my student apartment, Boulder, and the talented new friends I made.  The Beat poet’s experimental approach was liberating and my creativity exploded with ideas for poetry and non-fiction.  One class assignment was to write the outline for a book, which became the basis for my self-help manuscript that is now a 50,000 page rough draft.

Once I decided to leave my job, it was as if the Universe said, “Yes, this is the path you are supposed to be on.”  Life became easy and fun in ways that I hadn’t experienced before.  Since then, I’ve had ups and downs adjusting to a radically changed lifestyle.  But now I know what it feels like to be in the flow of life and am constantly making adjustments to stay where the magic is.  The Universe approves.

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Welcome to Truth and Details!

Knowing what is true for me and how I claim it are priorities in my life. I’ve always had a streak of advocacy in me.  When I was five years old, I wrote a letter to petition the principal of my elementary school to allow kindergartners to have chocolate milk on Fridays because the other grades did.  My reasoning was based on fairness.  He concurred, and I’ve been fond of chocolate milk and speaking up for what I believe in ever since.

Speaking the truth isn’t always popular no matter how politely it is phrased.  I’ve been disappointed by how frequently honest communication is shunned out of fear or the desire to keep the same broken systems in place.  It also isn’t always easy.  Sometimes the consequences are painful and self-preservation or protecting others overrules. Even in those cases, I’d rather be honest with myself about my choices.

This site is about sharing my truth and details and the wisdom I’m learning from others to live a more meaningful life.  Join me?

 

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