What if you currently live a very comfortable lifestyle and you have a
lot of assets? How can you justify running off to do what truly makes
you happy if it might put all your current assets at risk?
Here’s my take on this….
To abandon a comfortable lifestyle that isn’t deeply fulfilling
is to abandon nothing. There’s nothing of real substance there to
protect. An income, a car, a house, or a lifestyle are not worth
protecting if the cost of such protection is your own fulfillment and
happiness. People who achieve some of the external trappings of success
without internal fulfillment are only living an illusion when they tell
themselves they have something of value to protect. In most cases the
feeling that there’s something to protect is just an excuse used to
avoid facing the real fear — that maybe all this stuff isn’t really
worth anything compared to what’s being lost… that maybe I should be
living more boldly and not be so concerned about what happens to all my
stuff.
I currently have some material stuff in my life. I have a
business, computers, a car that’s fully paid for, and my wife and I are
closing escrow on a new home we’ve bought. But that’s all just stuff. It
doesn’t matter. It doesn’t have any real value. I’d gladly give it all
up and live in a shack if that was the price I’d have to pay to live my
mission. I want my life to have had more value than just acquiring stuff
and living comfortably. I may die rich, or I may die broke. But I won’t
die with my music still in me.
After all, why are we here? Is it to acquire stuff, live a
comfortable lifestyle, make our families as comfortable as possible, and
then die? Whether there’s an afterlife or not, one thing is clear — we
can’t take any of that stuff with us. Our comfortable lifestyle has no
power to endure.
And here’s the worst part. While you’re working so hard to
acquire and protect all that stuff, you could die unexpectedly. You
might die today. You might die tomorrow. Maybe you won’t die for another
70 years. Maybe your consciousness will be transferred into an android
body a few decades from now, but you could still be destroyed in an
accident, even if you make a backup of yourself. At least in the
present, you’re still vulnerable. Death happens to people every day.
150,000+ people died from the quake and tsunami in Southeast Asia. How
many of them knew at the beginning of December 2004 that they only had a
few weeks left to live? And look what happened to all the stuff those
people acquired — destroyed. Fisherman or tourist — it doesn’t matter.
We all end up the same way.
So what is the point of a life dedicated to the acquisition and
protection of stuff? All of your money and possessions can be taken
away from you by forces outside your control. No matter how many asset
protection techniques you apply, you can never guarantee full security
of your stuff. It’s perpetually vulnerable. There can be no true
security then in a life based on the acquisition and protection of
stuff.
So what have you got to lose? What are you truly risking if you
go after your dreams? If your current lifestyle is unfulfilling, then
you’re starting broke, no matter how much money you have. It doesn’t
matter if you start with $0 or $1 million. You have nothing to lose
either way. Money and material assets are just resources to use while
you’re here — you can’t take them with you. You’re only a temporary
steward of the money and possessions that pass through your life. So
when you risk money, you don’t risk anything of any enduring value. Earn
money, lose money, invest money. But don’t make material objects more
important than your own fulfillment and happiness.
If you’re sitting behind a desk working at a job you hate in
order to protect your current lifestyle, you are protecting nothing.
Isn’t there a part of you, deep inside, that wants to just walk away
from all of that junk and start really living? Can you feel how empty
and hollow your days are, how devoid of meaning? Have you forgotten what
it’s like to really live a day that fulfills you deeply as a human
being? Look around your home at all your stuff. Recognize that in the
long run, it will all eventually end up as dust. None of it will endure.
It’s all temporary. Your house will eventually crumble. Your car will
wind up in a junkyard. You cannot permanently keep any of this stuff.
Eventually you’re going to lose it all.
Or it will lose you.
So what kind of life is that — one that’s dedicated to the
guarding of dust? Is that what you want your life to be about? If you
feel there’s any purpose to your existence as a human being, then is
this it?
Life is just too precious to waste. If you are spending your
days working at a job that isn’t deeply fulfilling to you, then you’re
spending your days guarding dust. There’s no real value there. Stuff
cannot fulfill you. Ultimately it will only distract you from living on
purpose.
What does it mean to really live? Deep down, you already have a
sense of the direction where this answer lies for you. Ultimately, it’s
a choice. You’re totally free to live the kind of life you want. But
you’ll know you’re really living when you would live pretty much the
same way even if you knew you only had 18 months left. If you would make
some big changes in your life upon learning that you only had 18 months
to live, then why not make those changes now? Someone reading this blog
entry probably has less than 18 months to live. Maybe it’s you.
Live for what is real to you. Live for what truly matters to you.
What matters to me — what is real to me — is inspiring and
helping people. Directly or indirectly, whenever I’m able to help
someone solve a really tough problem or to motivate someone to finally
push past a big obstacle, that is something I find tremendously
fulfilling. And the fulfillment I get from doing this is so great that
it trumps all the external stuff. It doesn’t matter how much money I
make. It doesn’t matter if people reject my ideas or poke fun at what I
enjoy doing. This blog entry may be read by over 1000 people, but it may
be such that the ideas within are only able to help one person in a
very small way. The other 999 may conclude I’m nuts and unsubscribe. And
that’s fine. It’s that one person I’m writing for.
But at the same time, starting from the point of spending each
day doing something that fulfills me, I’m building this work into a
business that can support and sustain me and my family. This will
ultimately include paid speaking engagements, and information products
like books and audio programs. So I’m starting with doing what I love
and building it into a source of income. The more money the business
generates, the more people I’m ultimately able to reach. So making money
is aligned with my own personal fulfillment — they aren’t at odds with
each other. If you do what you love, then you can surely find a way to
turn it into an income stream — then the more money you make, the more
you expand your capacity to continue doing what you love in bigger and
bigger ways.
Taking what you love to do and turning it into a source of
income, either as an employee or an entrepreneur, seems hard to resist.
If you’re going to spend so much time working to make money, why not
make that money in the pursuit of your dreams instead of in the
protection of dust?
What does your current to do list look like? Is it filled with
tasks that aren’t even real to you? Are you typing stuff that doesn’t
matter, going to soulless meetings, shuffling papers and filling out
forms to appease computers, while sitting in a Dilbert-style cage all
day? Why do you continue to choose that life each day? You’re always
free to stop at any time. You make the rules.
What percentage of the tasks on your to do list will fulfill
you deeply to do them? What kind of to do list would be real to you?
What items might it contain? Compose a new piece of music. Write
something inspiring and share it with others. Give your spouse a
massage. Exercise. Play with your kids. Make a snowman in Las Vegas (my
wife did this one yesterday). Clear out some clutter. Read a really
great book. Audition for a local play. Start your own business. Tell
your boss, “Talk to the hand. I don’t do soulless work anymore.”
Do
something that leaves you feeling at the end of the day that you really
contributed the best of yourself. Don’t die with your music still in
you.
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