How I Learned the True Cost of Waiting for My Life to Begin
You don't have as much time as you think
I didn’t have to worry.
I’d done the right thing. And now my parents could brag about their son’s success. Even better, I could give that all-knowing nod to my friends, letting them know I’d scored the mother lode.
I was two months away from my college graduation and had just accepted a job with a major corporation — we’ll call it Acme, Inc. — a company with offices and production facilities all over the world.
Lots of opportunity, lots of room to grow. Especially for a young man just starting out.
Along with my acceptance came the foregone conclusion that if I did what I was told — what was expected of me — I’d have a secure future. The company was offering a decent salary, and as my father had told me so many times, I’d be getting those “good benefits,” which, back then, meant health and life insurance and a retirement pension.
In the words of my family, I was set for life.
The problem?
The idea of working for Acme — of actually showing up every day and doing the work — didn’t feel right. Even as I wrote my acceptance letter, filling the paragraphs with appreciation and gratitude for the job offer, I wondered what the hell I was doing.
I couldn’t shake the feeling I was putting my real life on hold to work at a job I didn’t like, to live in a place I didn’t care for, and to associate with people with whom I had nothing in common.
All I had to do was hang in there — for thirty years.
I was twenty-three.
Six months passed.
Going to that office every day — talking to customers, putting up with the corporate bullshit — was agony. And it left me feeling empty, wishing I was somewhere else, doing something else.
I was a duck out of water. And while I didn’t know where I belonged, I knew it wasn’t there.
But rather than listen to my gut, I kept reminding myself of the money, the benefits, and how embarrassing it would be to wear the label of “quitter.”
And that wasn’t the worst of it.
Everyone kept telling me how fortunate I was, especially since some of my classmates were still unemployed. If I left now — without another job to go to — my family and friends would think I’d lost my mind.
Maybe if I gave it more time …
I told myself I wasn’t giving the job a fair shake.
If I concentrated more on the advantages and less on the negatives, maybe I’d find a way to enjoy the work.
I started taking projects home.
I came into the office for a few hours on Saturday. While the other employee’s expense statements and sales call reports were handwritten, mine were typed. I really tried to convince myself that if I did my job well — and stuck with it long enough — I would learn to love it.
I actually remember days when I desperately wanted to love it.
Because working for Acme gave me a lot of ego strokes.
People were impressed when I told them what I did for a living.
It made me sound like I was accomplished, important, doing something significant with my life.
The first year passed. Then the second.
I began to wonder if there was something wrong with me — because I was doing well, receiving awards and recognition, even being named as one of the top ten producers in the company. And yet, it meant nothing to me.
So why wasn’t I happy?
I didn’t have an answer. At least not a clear one.
But I did have one recognizable symptom: I felt cheated. I missed that sense of satisfaction that comes at the end of the day, when you’ve done something meaningful with your time.
So I made myself The Promise.
I told myself it was just for a little while. Not forever, just until I was ready to start something on my own. And then someday, when the time was right, when I’d saved enough money and found the perfect opportunity, I would leave Acme and do something meaningful.
Then, I would Start Living my Real Life.
Every night I reviewed my plan, revising my options, considering all the possible choices of how I would start over.
As I went through my day, I reminded myself that my situation was just temporary, and after I’d finished this game of pretend, there would still be time to live a real life — to do the kind of work I wanted to do, to live the way I wanted to live.
Looking back on all those wasted years — 14 to be exact — I cringe at how I believed that part of my life was some kind of rehearsal, that my real life was still waiting for me, somewhere out there in the future.
What kept me from leaving?
I was waiting for “all green lights.”
I wanted my exit path to be completely free of unknowns, providing me with a seamless transition from where I was, to where I wanted to be.
I spent those 14 years in limbo because I thought everything had to be in perfect alignment before I could make a move.
It was a practical impossibility.
I’d also become a victim of momentum.
Every day that I continued working in that demotivating environment made it just that much harder to leave.
After five years, I was an economic captive.
Awards and perks became as commonplace as my new company car and expense account. And after ten years, the thought of doing without the money and benefits — of striking out on my own — was scary as hell.
Before I was willing to give up my false sense of security, I wanted a guarantee that my new life would make me not only happy, but rich.
I was ignoring the two most important rules of living life with urgency:
1. The longer you wait, the more you’ll have to give up to get what you really want. And . . .
2. Mediocrity becomes addictive.
I was especially guilty of violating the second rule.
At first I tolerated my circumstances, telling myself I was waiting for something better to come along. Then I got used to it, rationalizing the empty, meaningless nature of it all by convincing myself that . . .
It’s just the way life works.
I remember the subject coming up during one of the first lunches I shared with my co-workers.
They asked me if I’d always wanted to be an electrical engineer. I made the mistake of saying, “No,” explaining that I’d always enjoyed photography and had thought I would eventually wind up working in that industry.
I can still remember their thinly-veiled reprimands delivered with impromptu eulogies to their own youthful ambitions.
“Dreams are fine when you’re a kid,” one of them said. “But when you get out on your own, you have to grow up, give up the bullshit, and get on with making a living. The money’s what’s important, so you can live in a nice house at the end of the cul-de-sac and drive a new car every three years. Hell, it’s not a bad life. Certainly nothing to complain about.”
As the others nodded in agreement, I joined in, bobbing my head in obligatory tribal conformity. But I couldn’t stop wondering how an upscale street address and owning a late model car could form the basis of a personal value system.
Here’s what I wish one of them had told me:
Time passes and takes no prisoners.
Dreams die and ambitions fade. And suddenly, we’re asking ourselves, where did all the years go?
Believing you’re just coasting, waiting for the right opportunity, is doing the worst kind of injustice to yourself.
In short, trying to convince your dissenting inner voice that the time you’re spending right now on a boring, unproductive life doesn’t count is bat-shit crazy.
You may think you’ve got plenty of years ahead.
Lots of time to get serious, to make your life count. Maybe you do. Maybe you don’t.
I can only tell you that today matters more than tomorrow. Do nothing today and you’ll still be stuck tomorrow. But then you’ve lost a day, which turns into a month, a year . . . a lifetime.
If one of my co-workers had told me that, instead of reciting a clichéd prescription for middle-aged desperation, I might have left Acme a lot sooner. Maybe my life would have been more productive — more satisfying at a younger age. I don’t know.
Back then, the general consensus was to conform, to become part of the system, to find a place that offered career tenure with a financially secure future.
Today, I see a lot of young people in their early twenties working at large companies, doing jobs ranging from servers in restaurants to buyers for department store chains. And after chatting with them for a few minutes — after they’re comfortable knowing our conversation will remain private — they often disclose their job is just temporary, and their real interest lies elsewhere.
I let them talk.
I don’t tell them I went through a similar transition. Because mine isn’t a good example.
I waited too long to take action. I gave away too much time.
But maybe someday, if one of them asks me for my opinion, or wants advice from someone older, then I’ll speak up. And here’s what I’ll tell them:
1. Stop lying to yourself.
If your job makes you feel like you’re wasting your life, be truthful about your situation, especially to yourself.
Admit you’d be better off — happier — doing something different. Determine what that is and put together a plan to make it happen. Taking that first step will give you direction and start the process of building a better future.
2. Realize that a “career for life” is an archaic concept.
The majority of current workers will change jobs a dozen times.
“Adjusting” your occupation to accommodate changing interests and opportunities is considered a normal part of career development, and no longer carries the negative stigma of being flighty or unreliable.
3. Re-frame your need to move as a transition.
Avoid thinking in terms of quitting and re-starting. Thoughts of walking away from your main source of income can create tons of unwanted stress, which in turn, reduces your desire to take action.
Assure yourself that you’re not going to make any sudden or irrational moves. And this time, you’re going to get it right.
4. Keep your plans confidential.
If you need the income from your current job during your transition, keep your dissatisfaction — and your plans to leave — to yourself.
Avoid discussing your intentions with anyone who is even remotely connected to the company you work for. That includes trusted co-workers, customers, vendors, the cleaning staff, building maintenance personnel, the UPS guy — anyone who knows where you work.
It may be tempting to share your plans with someone who understands your pain. But don’t do it — unless you’re ready to leave. Admitting that your professional attention is focused elsewhere can bring your employment to an abrupt end.
5. Finally, take the first step.
Don’t wait for all green lights.
Do what makes sense — right now. Later steps may not be apparent to you until you’re further along with the transition process, so don’t try to anticipate what you don’t know.
Many successful people have admitted they didn’t know enough about what lay ahead to be overwhelmed or discouraged, and they simply started making their transition with a desire to succeed.
“The secret of getting ahead is to break complex, overwhelming tasks into smaller, manageable ones, and then take the first step.” — Mark Twain
Thanks for reading,
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Roger A. Reid, Ph.D. is a certified NLP trainer with degrees in engineering and business. Roger is the author of Better Mondays and Speak Up, and host of Success Point 360 Podcast, offering tips and strategies for achieving higher levels of career success and personal fulfillment in the real world.