I have thought a lot about satisfaction in the workplace in recent years and can’t help but wonder how many people are actually doing work that they love? My guess is not too many.
For many years I have surveyed (for my own interest) different people who I have worked with and asked them how happy they are in their job. Most of them look at me quizzically, not understanding the question. It seems a large portion of our population has succumbed to the thought that the work that you do is just that…work. Work is not meant to be enjoyed, not meant to be fun, and is simply a means to an end. The end being paying bills, saving for retirement, and taking care of everyday expenses etc. And even though I just recently (in the last 2 years or so), have come to the realization regarding the work I am meant to do, the idea that work is just work has never been something that sat well with me. In fact I realize now, all the time I had been asking different people if they enjoyed their work, I was trying to figure out how they got there. The challenge is that I never found one person that said, “Yes, I love this!” That is not to say those people aren’t out there, I am sure there are many people who enjoy their work, I just haven’t spoken to them.
I understand for the most part why a lot of people aren’t doing work that they love. It stems partially from the society that we live in that requires us to make a decision in our college years to determine what we want to do for the rest of our lives. The reality is that what we choose during college doesn’t always translate into work after college(says the writer who has a Bachelors in Exercise Science and a Masters in Psychology, but isn’t doing either of those things and is looking for a new career). For instance, I had an interest in fitness, but didn’t know where I wanted to go with it after college. By the time I realized it probably wasn’t something I would enjoy for the long haul, I already had too many credit hours to switch to something else, and I didn’t even know what I wanted to switch to. I wanted/needed to graduate so I stuck with the fitness degree. Fast forward a few years and you would find me enrolling in a Masters program for Psychology with an idea of helping people. Still unsure of the path I would take, I finished the degree and finally (a few years after that) found my calling. I was meant to be a life coach.
I think another reason many people don’t follow their dream career is because sometimes dreams don’t seem “practical”. I had a friend in college who was (and still is) a wonderful artist. She was accepted into a prestigious art program not far from her home and because her mother didn’t think that art could pay the bills, she was forced into a career in business and finance, a far cry from the creative outlet she was looking for.
I have often thought about the conundrum of doing work for love or for money and wondered how many people have ever really thought about the work that they do. Most people probably do their work for the income it brings in, even if it isn’t as much as they would like to make from it. In an economy that still seems unsteady, it seems irresponsible, frivolous, and some may say just plain stupid to give up a “sure thing” job to dive head first into a dream that you may never achieve. I beg to differ. While I am absolutely a numbers gal and can be very practical when it comes to money and finances, I am also a dreamer, creator, and artist.
I was meant to do work that I love.
Looking back I now realize a part of me has always pushed me into work that I love be it choreography, being a dance teacher and coach, but most of all talking to people and motivating them to do the things they love. I have always been doing this, only now am I seeing it from the stand point of a career. A career that would make me excited to get up everyday. Something that would allow me to help others and to push people to realize their dreams and have the courage to achieve them. For me it hasn’t ever been about money. I have taken “jobs” just because I need to pay the bills, but I have a bigger vision in mind. I want to do the work that makes my heart sing. For me it’s more about the love of what I do than the money I make doing it. Sure, I have bills to pay, retirement to save for, and a family to help support, but I know that if I am doing the work that I love, it will all work out. It won’t happen magically in a year or two and it will take some hard work, financial planning, and dedication to my career, but if I can do work that I love, it is icing on the cake.
So let me ask you this…do you do what you do for love or for money? And if it isn’t for love, can you do what you love as a career? It might require a bit of outside the box thinking, but I am sure there is a way.