Are You Trading the Clown Car for the Trapeze?

Before I finally left my soul-killing job in Corporate America, I always got the itch to change jobs about every two or three years.  It never failed.

Does this happen to you? At first, you like your job. It’s new, there are different tasks, and different co-workers.

Eventually, the newness wears off. The routine sets in. The drudgery ensues.  Those “different” co-workers are now just an annoying set of extras in the drama of your life.

You begin to entertain other options.  The grass begins to look greener at some other firm, or some other pursuit. Occasionally, you search Monster.com or even, pathetically, the Careers section of your current employers’ intranet.

If this is you, you can be sure of at least two things:

1. You are not working in the field of your calling.
The problem is not “the job.” It’s the whole field of work you are in. When you live in that cycle of trying of constant job changes and job hunting for “something better” it usually means that you are totally out of your element.

This is the place many of us find ourselves trapped in. We have a resume, and it is defined by exactly the kind of work we no longer want to pursue. We probably never did want to pursue it. But, there we are, and it is nearly impossible to get out. That was the world of banking and finance or me. I spent 10 years in that place, and did not know how I was ever going to get out.

But you MUST get out. Or kiss your passion good-bye.

Crossing the Chasm between where we are and where we want to be is the most difficult part of the process, but it is possible. I am going to be sharing more on this topic in a future post.

2. You will not be happy in the next job either.
There is a strong temptation to substitute one career that is not our calling for another career that isn’t our calling. A good friend of mine, who knows the plight of working for the man all too well, put it this way: It’s like moving from the clown car to the trapeze.

Yeah, it’s a change.  Yeah, the perspective is different.  But at the end of the day, it’s still working for the circus.

Abandoning our career and embracing our calling is about leaving the circus all together. It’s about finding and fulfilling that one thing you know you were created to do. It’s about finding the “sweet spot” where passion, purpose, and our God-given talents converge.

Ask yourself this: Are you ready to leave the circus, or are you just looking for a different job description under the same Big Tent?

If you are ready to leave the circus, then email me with your single greatest obstacle or fear that is standing in your way from taking the next step. I’d love to see if I can help.

  • Germaine

    What about doing your calling in your free time and work in some other times? I am having most fun and success in doing things natural to my calling but they don't pay money (political activism).

  • thinkrink

    Totally cool. It's not all about making a paycheck doing what you are called to do. Rather, it is about doing what you love in work and life. For example, the Apostle Paul often made tents to support himself. I would argue that he really enjoyed the tentmaking craft, and didn't feel that it was a drudgery. He was skilled at it, and probably found it to be rewarding, significant work. Also, Peter probably loved fishing. It may have even been a struggle for him to leave fishing as a vocation to be a full time preacher of the Gospel. In a more modern day example, there are many entrepreneurs who would say that their calling in life is something completely unrelated to their business, but that they enjoy their business immensely, and it provides them with the time and resources to do whatever it is they consider their true calling.

    The bottom line is this: Do you enjoy what you do for a job? If not, why not? The point is to try as best as we can to live a congruent life, where our work life is in harmony with the totality of who we are.

  • http://www.ohrepublic.info Harold Thomas

    I found my calling when I started my blog (The Ohio Republic) nearly 3 years ago. I am writing a book, which after a slow start is turning into a passion, because I want everyone to understand what a free society is like. I'd like to do it full time — but need to have some success; because financially, I can't retire just yet.

  • thinkrink

    Harold-you are definitely on the right track. The time line is different for everyone, and we always have to take into consideration our stage in life, financial goals etc. Also, you never really know what avenue success will come. Be open to any opportunity to get your work out there, and to build your platform as an authority. Eventually, the labor will pay off.

  • http://www.ohrepublic.info Harold Thomas

    I found my calling when I started my blog (The Ohio Republic) nearly 3 years ago. I am writing a book, which after a slow start is turning into a passion, because I want everyone to understand what a free society is like. I'd like to do it full time — but need to have some success; because financially, I can't retire just yet.

  • thinkrink

    Harold-you are definitely on the right track. The time line is different for everyone, and we always have to take into consideration our stage in life, financial goals etc. Also, you never really know what avenue success will come. Be open to any opportunity to get your work out there, and to build your platform as an authority. Eventually, the labor will pay off.