Monday, January 11, 2016

Choosing Your Passion as Your Career

A few people are blessed to realize early on in life what their true passion is and are capable of making a career out of it. A second group of people knows what their life’s calling is but are too afraid, for any number of reasons, to pursue it as a career. Then there are the majority of us that spend most of our lifetimes trading hours for dollars in a career that can be tolerated but is personally unfulfilling – never giving a thought to what it is that we would ultimately like to accomplish in our very finite lifetimes.

I consider myself one of the few blessed. I work virtually every day, because I love what I do. I have known what I wanted to be since the age of ten. Yet, even I was sidetracked for a short time by the enticements of corporate titles, steady paychecks, and pats on the back from executives who, truth be told, would have thrown me under a bus at a moment’s notice to save their own careers.

Then life happened. The shit hit the fan in triplicate, and I was left contemplating whether to continue down my current path or skip both forks in the road and blaze right through the woods to the destiny that called me. Some people never have that head-in-the-hands, heart-wrenching moment, and so they just carry on as pretenders – doers of all things other than what they were put on Earth to do.

I was compelled to write this post based on a conversation that I had last week with a senior executive who is struggling to come to terms with his life and his career. He knows what he is doing is not his passion, and has at least three things he would rather be doing for a living. Struggling to prioritize those things and decide which to do, he asked “How do I know which is my life’s calling? How do I know if I can be happy doing it for the rest of my life?”

My answer started with three questions back to him:

1.    Are you willing and capable of taking a temporary pay cut?
2.    Are you willing to work more hours and perform more administrative tasks than you have ever had to perform before?
3.    How many vacation days do you have saved for this year?

He answered yes, yes, and 13 days. My recommendation made sense to him:

“Sell your Mercedes and stop eating out. Take the thirteen days off (that’s seventeen total days, now that you work weekends), and spend at least ten hours a day on your first passion choice. Get a business license, create a marketing plan, hire an attorney, set up your accounting records, purchase your capital equipment, build your website, create your first product and begin to sell it. If you do that, you will have worked five weeks as compared to your current forty hour a week job.

On day eighteen, if you find yourself running back to the serenity of your corporate position, you have not found your life’s calling. You have found a hobby. You will need to repeat this process next year with your second passion choice.

On the other hand, if you find yourself compelled to work another seventeen days without a break, you’ve probably found your life’s passion, and there is nothing that can stop you now.”