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I find some of my best lessons for retirement come from
business and career books. This is the reason I was drawn to Mike Lewis’ book: When to Jump—If the Job You Have Isn’t the
Life You Want.
The title made me think, “What do you do if the retirement
you have isn’t the life you want?” I wanted to learn more.
Lewis writes about his decision to leave a corporate career
to pursue the professional squash circuit—a ball and racket sport that’s played
in a four-walled court. He left what was certain and financially lucrative to
go after what was calling him. It wasn’t easy, but he knew he had to do it.
Based on society’s definition of success, Lewis should have
loved his life—it was everything he had worked to achieve. Get good grades. Go
to a highly selective college. Get a great internship and be offered a
permanent position upon graduation. His parents were happy. He was supposed to
be happy. It was what I call a “looks good, feels bad” job for Mike. Maybe for
someone else it would be a “looks good, feels good” job. That’s the person who
should be doing it.
I was drawn to this book because I believe the retirement
lifestyle can also be a “looks good, feels bad” place. You prepare financially
for retirement so that you can enjoy this next stage of life without work. But
once you get here, you may find that it’s not enough. Something isn’t right.
Lewis writes about the “little voice.” He says, “It feels
awkward when a little voice talks to you, a voice you’re scared to listen to.
It feels even more awkward when that voice won’t go away.” Eventually Lewis had
to respond.
Not that it was easy. And if you have a little voice that is
reminding you of a dream or goal you had for your life, doing something about
that voice won’t be easy for you either. Lewis said, “I had the job and
lifestyle I had thought I wanted, yet I secretly held out hope—for a knock on
the door, for someone to enter my tiny office, walk up to my desk, and give me
permission to leave: 'Mike, it’s July 1, time to chase your dream, remember?' ”
Like Mike, you may be waiting for a knock on the door,
permission to go after your dream. If the voice is speaking to you, and it
won’t go away, now is the time to start doing what you really want to be doing.
Amazon’s founder and CEO Jeff Bezos delivered this advice to
graduating Princeton students, “When you are 80 years old, and in a quiet
moment of reflection narrating for only yourself the most personal version of
your life, the telling that will be most compact and meaningful will be the
series of choices you have made. In the end, we are our choices. Build yourself
a great story.”
Although this message was directed to 20-something-year-old
graduates, Bezos asked them to think about when they’re 80 years old. Most of
us are closer to 80 than 20-something. Consider this message your knock on the
door. It might be time to jump.
Copyright 2018. Patrice Jenkins. All Rights Reserved.
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