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Posted On 03.29.09

“You’re quitting.”

My boss is a good guy. I’ve observed to him that he is one of the most peculiar fellows I’ve ever met. Though this seems to wound him, he takes it in good cheer. While I find him utterly indecipherable, that sense of opacity doesn’t go both ways. He reads minds, when he remembers to venture outside of his own.

“…How did you know?”

I decided one afternoon in January that I would quit my job. In the midst of terrifying economic headlines, soaring unemployment and an uncertain future, I chose to separate myself from an organization that loved me, paid me well and showed me endless respect and appreciation.

“It’s nothing about working for me, or anything, is it? Because if there’s something else you’d rather be doing, we can find you a different spot, working on something else.”

Full Sail University is a private school on the northern end of Orlando. Trying to describe Full Sail takes the better part of our 200 page catalog, and even that barely scratches the surface. Let’s just say it’s one of the most incredible places anyone could ever work. I got my Bachelor’s at Full Sail and I’ve worked there six years: first as an intern, next as its first search engine marketing manager, then as a project manager for our COO.

“You’ve been a great boss. I’m not leaving because of you. And I still believe in the incredible work we do. I’m leaving because if I stay here, I’ll have a solid future with a lot of growth and responsibility. And that will be great. But I’ll never do the thing that I’m supposed to do. The thing I was made to do.”

I never planned a six year stint at a private college in Florida, of all places. But I was lucky: Full Sail took me seriously and invested heavily in my growth. I was spoiled rotten and so I stayed. Despite this prolonged comfort, somehow I felt no fear as I told my boss I’d be leaving no later than July 1st. The sense of command, clarity and confidence it gave to my future was a powerful horse that I rode into the decision.

“Early on, I had this same conversation with my boss. I was convinced I had to leave to do what I had to do. Are you sure leaving is the only way you can do this?”

Since that day, I half-heartedly worked at finding my next job. The realization came slowly, over three months. The truth is that I don’t want another job. I don’t want another boss. I am the best-qualified person to analyze and direct my energies. I am happiest when I have the freedom to split up my day into two or three chunks. I’m happiest when I can work all morning and take the afternoon off, then come back to my project at midnight and work until sunrise. I am positively blissful when making my own decisions and executing them without need for approval, delegation or committee discussion. As of today, my job search is over. I’m my next job.

“I love everyone here. It’s not that I want to get away from here. It’s that I need to make things. I need to take a space that has nothing and fill it with a something. Something that works well. Something that makes people happy. That makes their lives better. I need to go in search of how to dedicate 100% of my energies to that task.”

So on July 1st, I’ll say goodbye to my job. I’ll say goodbye to Florida on my longest roadtrip ever and make a new home somewhere around Seattle — Bellevue is looking great. I will cultivate my lifelong obsession with the creation of things that make people happy. Somehow, I will keep myself clothed, fed and out of the rain. It’s going to be hard. I’m confident that if I keep at it, continue working at it every single day until it drives me mad, then keep going anyway, I’ll be okay. The details are, as they say, just details.

Most importantly, though, I will be living for my own purposes as my own keeper.

I’m sure there will be a paycheck or two still to be collected in my future: maybe something part-time at Whole Foods to make ends meet or, heck, even some short-term officey stuff if it’s for a group who can teach me about how to better be a maker of things. The focus, though, is now all about personally setting the course for my everyday life.

I can’t wait for July.

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March 29, 2009 4:55 pm

I went through very much the same thought process. Just as I was debating whether to quit my job and focus full time on a business I had been experimenting with in my free time, I got laid off and the decision became quite simple.

It takes a lot of will power and self direction to create something from nothing once all ties are severed with the regular daily routines that an ordinary job brings. Time management really becomes a matter of self management. I think the self directed lifestyle is what we all really want though.

I would encourage you to start thinking about what it is that you will do now. Perhaps even get started now, as you will likely have to throw a few ideas up on the wall to see what sticks. Once you've worked up the gumption to pursue your own projects, it's extremely derailing to have turning a half hearted job search into a full blown networking and industry research effort distract you from your purpose.

March 29, 2009 5:37 pm

Brian,

Definitely good advice. Much of my inspiration for this decision is simple math: my iPhone development projects, calculated in dollars earned per hour worked, have so far earned me double what I'd make for a 40 hour workweek in my current job. It's a situation where I'm enjoying my sideline so much, I'd rather it be my main focus. At this point my inspiration exceeds my time available to execute -- I need to change that.

But yeah, if I hadn't already been working what amounts to a second job as an iPhone developer, I couldn't do what I'm planning to do with anywhere near this level of confidence.

March 30, 2009 10:37 am

As far as planning, advice, and perhaps funding, go to http://sba.gov . Can't hurt and it might help.

As far as Bellevue, Redmond and Issaquah go, remember these are the zipcodes of most of the executives from Boeing, Microsoft, Starbucks, Amazon, T-Mobile and so on. Gonna be expensive living there. A number of people go for lower costs in Renton, Kirkland, Kent, Tukwila, and East Seattle. King County's transit system is so-so, so a car is going to be necessary. Beware of the morning and evening rushes on I-405, SR 520, I-90 (especially across the bridges), and I-5, especially since summer construction projects are going to be in full swing. Good luck.

March 30, 2009 11:22 am

Thanks for the Seattle advice, JRandom42. The high cost of living does have me a little spooked, definitely. I like the geography of the area and the culture and technology businesses there are encouraging for professional networking.

At this point, even with a "big" city an hour or two away, I think I'm all set as long as I have internet access. Considering ditching city life altogether, since my development work can be done anywhere and most any consulting or contract work I'd do via telecommute. If I'm feeling social, I can venture into the city.

With that in mind, girlfriend and I are toying with the thought of Olympia and *really* simplifying our lives. Since I have nowhere to be at any specific time and a few bucks stashed away for survival, we'll use the roadtrip out of Florida to evaluate places to settle around the northwest.

March 30, 2009 11:36 am

Olympia is pretty nice, and housing is at least half that of the Seattle metro area. If you're an outdoors person, lots of stuff for camping, kayaking, hiking, 4 wheeling are around. Mt. Rainier and the Olympic National Forest are fairly close as is the coast. There's a sizeable spillover of miltary from Ft Lewis, mostly families. Sometimes it can be a pain driving up to Tacoma and Seattle (half hour and hour away, respectively), especially since I-5 is the only major way of getting there. There also has been some spillover of crime from Tacoma (generally regarded as the armpit of the Puget Sound area, even though there are nice areas around there.)

One thing to note: The cities are pretty zealous in licensing businesses, and have hefty fines for not licensing your home-based business. Licenses are cheap, and are definitly worth not getting hassled and fined by the city.

One other: If you're willing to pay for it, ComCast has FiOS in the Olympia area, so 50 Mb/sec downloads can be yours!

March 30, 2009 11:44 am

One final thing: it does get cold and rainy here, even into June. This area is why GoreTex was invented. Invest in some good breathable raingear and boots. Local companies like REI and Eddie Bauer are high end choices to shop.

March 30, 2009 12:02 pm

Wow. Absolutely outstanding insight. Thanks for taking the time to share your wisdom on the region. Nothing better than hearing about a new place from someone who knows A recent vacation included a visit to Olympic National Park and that's what sold me on Washington. Can't wait for gortex-clad hiking.

Excited for adventure and for super fat bandwidth!

The Office Newb
March 30, 2009 12:46 pm

Danilo,

A while back BC asked me to write up a guide to the Seattle area under their now defunct "location guides" section. Maybe this would be a good time for them to print it?

March 30, 2009 12:56 pm

Finally, if you're a Discovery Channel fan, nearly all of the crab boats from "Deadliest Catch" are home ported in Seattle. The waterfront away from Pike Place Market has some of the bars the captains and crews frequent. And, a few of the local restaurants have signed agreements with some of the boats to exclusivly buy their catch of king and opilio (snow) crab.

March 30, 2009 3:28 pm

"I’m sure there will be a paycheck or two still to be collected in my future: maybe something part-time at Whole Foods to make ends meet or, heck, even some short-term officey stuff if it’s for a group who can teach me about how to better be a maker of things."

While it might be harder in these trying times, one of the time honored way to get a paycheck, learn stuff from other people doing similar things, and to make contacts within the industry segments, is to work contracts. Some short to medium term gigs (2 to 6 months) will pay decent money (you tend to be on your own for medical), will put you in touch with others who share your interest and may one day be customers. If you do so, remember that most of the contract work for what you're looking for will be in East and South King County as well as downtown Seattle, and that makes Olympia at least an hour commute each way.

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