This is a story about handling your money stuff so you can create the space to grow your business from a place of focus and creativity, instead of scarcity and desperation.
I quit my day job 5 times.
Yep. I have announced my full time work-f0r-my-selfness, to myself and my family 5 times. And after 4 of those times, I found myself back in an office job.
Which I did! But it was hard, and later on that year I got hit with a few unexpected expenses, which stretched my unpredictable income pretty thin. A friend of mine was working part time for a law firm, and was going on vacation for a few weeks. The pay was not great, but they needed help, and when I did math again….I needed the money. So I said yes – but proudly explained that I had my own business so this would be a short term substitution only.
Fast forward a few more months, and they invited me to come back on a part time ongoing basis. And again, looking to my trusty excel sheet, I said yes, because I needed to be earning more money than my business was providing.
So I worked for them for a few months. And when that job ended, I was offered another job at a law firm – which I took. Because seriously, having a steady baseline of income was the most helpful thing to me, to give me the emotional and financial space to develop my business into the thing I knew it could be.
Because when you’re worried about rent, you’re not trying new things. You’re not developing relationships with potential clients, you’re not engaging in your community. You’re freaking stressed out, and you’re obsessing about money. And nobody wants to hang out with, or work with that.
So I worked my 4th part time bridge job. And I was HAPPY about it. Because that bridge job gave me wings. It gave me space to breathe, and to create what I so desperately knew I was capable of.
Making money does not always have to mean creating it out of thin air with your business.
I stopped seeing ‘going back to work’ as a failure. As a shameful thing to hide. It gave me the freedom to build my business – I never would have gotten so specific, or ‘limited’ myself if I was so stressed out about money. I would have kept trying to work with everyone, and gotten no where.
So when I quit that job, last November (yep, not that long ago) I thought to myself “I’m full time for myself!!…..unless I need to do this again. Then I WILL. Because I know how to get part time jobs and make them work for both me, and the company I’m working for.”
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This is a really empowering look at bridge jobs, Ellen. Thanks for the alternate perspective on it! I’ve always viewed bridge jobs as failure, too, and you’re right — it’s not. It’s really not. It’s all about the situation you’re in and what you/your family needs.
Yeah! Also another element that I didn’t talk about in here that has REALLY changed my perspective, is that I can GET a bridge job if I want or need one.
And that’s not the case in many parts of the world. So, I feel extra grateful for that opportunity too.
Thanks for sharing this!
I ponder quitting all the time, but stay because I know I’m not *quite* financially ready. I’m tired of everyone saying “there’s never a good time to start, quit now!”, but – as you said – you still need to pay rent!
Thanks for being so honest and open, and you’ve inspired me to think differently about my current FT job, PT dreams.
YES! You gotta pay rent, and you need to feel GOOD about it.
Sometimes leaping is helpful because it makes you work tremendously hard to make things happen. But if you have the opportunity to build your savings, invest in your business, and be more comfortable as you’re building your business, there is NOTHING wrong with that.
Your ulcers will thank you in the long run 🙂