=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- title: Success is a Trap date: 2024-01-03 07:46:00 =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- What does it mean to be "successful?" I've been asking myself that question a lot lately. By societal standards, I think most people would say that I am "successful." I have had a career trajectory that has always trended towards financial and reputational growth—and the golden handcuffs to prove it—but as I approach middle-age, I'm starting to feel like I've been striving to achieve somebody else's definition of success rather than figuring out *my own* definition. When I look at the aspects of my life that aren't my job or my salary, I feel a lot *less* successful. I'm increasingly out of shape, end every work day stressed and anxious, and am too tired and overwhelmed to engage in many of the hobbies I used to love—just forcing myself to sit down and write for my own enjoyment has felt like a Herculean task at times, never mind finding the energy to do something physical like go swimming. Don't get me wrong, I have a happy and healthy family that I love *dearly*, but lately it's felt like I'm wasting the best years of my life—and my kids' lives—taking video calls at a desk instead of *living*. Like many people, I have used my professional growth as a yardstick for measuring my own worth. If I'm not getting the promotion or raise, then *what is it all for?* But "success," as it's been peddled to us, is a fucking trap. Turns out, the point of work is to live, not the other way around, and how can I *honestly* say I've been living if I've been working myself into a bundle of anxious nerves, weight gain, back pain, and sleep problems? I've gotten to where I am because *I've always gone above-and-beyond*. A problem I am sure is common to most childhood overachievers, my need to please has set me up for a never-ending cycle of burnout and exhaustion working for companies that couldn't care less about me. I've struck a bad bargain, and I'm starting to have trouble seeing the exit hatch; but that's kind of the point of the golden handcuffs, though, isn't it? If I didn't have a critical financial dependence on the job I have *right now*, then I wouldn't feel so compelled to continue running in the rat race. The thing is, this doesn't seem to be an uncommon place for many professionals to be. I feel like I keep having this conversation on repeat with other people in my position, and the end-result is generally one of two paths: 1. You suck it up, focus on the work, and wind up miserable in a well-paying upper-management role someday. 2. You bail out and intentionally limit your career growth, focusing instead on family, friends, and self. A decade ago, this dilemma would have seemed painfully foreign to me, but now I'm starting to understand the 60-year-old senior developer who is perfectly content with their balanced and low-stress professional life, despite having the talent and intelligence to actually *run* the department. I've attached my self-worth to my job title and my income, but I can't do that anymore. I'd rather do good for less money, and have more time for the things and people that I love. The challenge for me now isn't to find a way to reach that next promotion or raise, but to find a way to become the teacher or writer I've always wanted to be while still providing for my family. >> This is post 019 of #100DaysToOffload EOF