Guarantee the career you want
Your job is not perfect. Me neither. We have hidden gifts you and I.
First instinct, especially in the heady days of early January, is to re-evaluate and consider massive life changes.
Have we in fact missed our calling? In a word: yes. But it’s an easier fix than you might think.
Have you ever heard the expression: “When you’re doing what you really love, it doesn’t feel like a job?” Do you know why this is true? It’s because when you’re doing what you really love you probably aren’t at work. Day jobs are sometimes less-than-totally fulfilling. They don’t normally appreciate or honour our full greatness. They normally can’t. (Because that’s not their job).They are not designed with us in mind, but rather with our clients in mind. But their imperfection doesn’t mean they are wrong for us. We accept their imperfections as they accept ours. And that’s not bad.
Non-jobs are an antidote to less-than-completely-fulfilling careers. They offer a fulfilling ‘third place’. A place, that is not our job and not our home-life, where we grow in the ways we crave.
If you want a non-job, it’s yours. All who apply (themselves) can have one.
Maybe you’re a writer, deep down. Or you really enjoy painting. Maybe you’re a hilarious dancer with a calling for YouTube. Whatever it is you have to share, whatever you’ve been waiting for, the opportunity to show off, put that into your non-job. Make it part of your daily life.
5 Steps to Non-Job Success

- We can change what we do, but we can’t change what we ENJOY doing. The non-job is for us, not for credit. So do something fun, something enjoyable, something that takes you to a flow-state.
- You probably already know what your non-job should be, so give it some of your time. Make it your practice, your creative practice. From now on, consider yourself a painter or dancer, as much as a lawyer, or marketer of magazine ads. We are artists as long as we practice.
- Break some rules. Experiment. Enjoy it. Discover how you like to work, when you’re non-jobbing.
- Gather evidence of your art and share it. Again, not for the credit, but because our crafts have meaning in them and meaning is for sharing. Sharing meaning is always a gift, regardless of how much it is appreciated. And it feels good to give gifts. So sell it on Etsy. Start a photography blog. Wrap it for Valentine’s Day. Something. Get it out there.
- Finally, be grateful about it. Now that you’re a successful dancer, who’s work has been viewed by literally tens of people
around the world, find a way to encourage others. Be involved in your new community. Say something to your tribe about how you work. Explain your crazy moves. This helps to build community around you and that keeps you going.
If you’re lucky, eventually, maybe your non-job will pay the bills too. But that can take years. In the mean time, you don’t need to be starving to be an artist.
So, this year, take time for your non-job. Take time to develop a new creative practice. It’s a great way to put into your life whatever it is that you’re missing: to make sense of the world, generate community, break rules, feel successful, express yourself, explore, to feel an increasing sense of mastery, to experiment.
And it feels good too.
(Today’s brilliant photos are care of this person and this person).
