TheSanityPlan

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What Do I Want to Do When I Grow Up?

June 30, 2017 By Sara M. 5 Comments

questionsThis question.

It plays over and over again in my mind. Sometimes it plagues me. Sometimes it’s more of a nagging itch. Other times it arrives with a shrug, as in “I know you’re still there but there’s nothing I can do about you right now.”

I’ve often thought that my struggle with this question came from a lack of parent/teacher direction when I was a teenager, but now I am not sure that this is the case. The only “job” I ever really dreamed about as a child was writing, but my dad always told me that was impractical. So, I ended up just letting my career develop organically, jumping from job to job until I found something that worked in terms of enjoyment and reward.

But was it really what I wanted to do? Like, for the rest of my life?

No. And I knew that almost instantly when I was laid off in 2014. The wash of relief was very much like being glad that your boyfriend finally broke up with you because it’s been over and you haven’t had the nerve to cut the ties yourself.

So, what do I want to do when I grow up?

A question that motherhood has served to both highlight and confound. With three children at home, I have very little time to think about myself, let alone dream and scheme about my next career move. But every now and then, especially as the children grow and become more capable, this question forces its way back to the forefront of my mind. Begging to be answered. Determined to be heard. And at those moments when I finally stop and listen, I am more inspired to find that right answer because of how little time I can devote to such a task. With my heart bent towards my children, whatever takes my attention away must be really precious. Really worthwhile.

This final pregnancy has delayed my ambitions for the time being. I know fully well how much time and attention and energy a new baby will need, and I’ve slowed up my plans accordingly. Before we decided to have just one more, I was considering a freelance writing career, dabbling in copywriting and essay writing. There were books I wanted to write and small businesses I wanted to run.

Despite knowing that my time will be monopolized in the near future, ideas come to me in droves. My cousin just finished her doctorate, didn’t I want to go back to school for a doctorate? My passion for business and psychology could lead me to a study of industrial organization psychology. So, back to school. Would that be worth it? Another 2-3 years of devotion to set myself up for a potential consulting job?

What if I went back to a corporate career – didn’t I find enjoyment in the sense of accomplishment and structure of corporate life? I would certainly enjoy the regular paycheck and benefits. But seeing my husband run his own business and reap the rewards of entrepreneurship has given me a craving for the same. Don’t I want to be my own boss? Do I have enough discipline?

careerThe truth is: I like pieces of everything. I can get excited about so many different topics and so many different fields. And that is what I think is the more likely culprit in my lack of answer to this question than the vague direction I received as a youth. Too many passions leave me floundering between them all.

I recently came across a great TED Talk that helped me feel better about this. Emilie Wapnik has spent many years coaching people who feel the way I do; people with varying interests, dreams, and desires. Her philosophy is that it’s totally normal to have “multiple potentials” and we just have to figure out the best way to navigate them. I’m picking up her new book and will review on the blog.

But… back to that dreaded question.

The answer is: I don’t know. But let me tell you what I do know.

I know that I have many, many passions. I know that I have time to sort it out, although I will probably have more time to do so after our newest addition arrives and becomes more independent. I know that it’s okay to try things and fail. I know that I have time in this lifetime to do several different things, perhaps at the same time, perhaps consecutively.

I am okay with not having an answer for today. For now, I’ll keep weeding through my passions, taking the time to explore what constitutes me. I’ll be making some lists and testing out some theories. Want to join along? I’d love some creative collaboration on this journey!

Filed Under: Work/Life Tagged With: career, direction, SAHM, WAHM, work

The Sanity Plan Update & Announcement!

May 3, 2017 By Sara M. 9 Comments

work from homeLife can really throw you off track sometimes. When I started this blog last year, I was making plans and taking steps to explore a potential career in writing. I thought our family life had stabilized and I could begin to work on myself again.

And then, well, life happened. Literally.

My husband and I decided that we really did want to have another baby. My third and my husband’s fourth. And presto, here we are, expecting a new little man due in October.

So, I’ve really needed to reevaluate based on this new direction. First and foremost, to at least partially explain my absence from writing, I have pretty brutal morning sickness that typically lasts until about 15 weeks. I am just beginning to feel well enough to take back on some of my creative work.

The other thing that I am still working through when it comes to writing is deciding which avenues I really want to pursue. Is it that children’s book idea I have? Or, the non-fiction books that I want to write? My memoir? Or, working towards writing essays for publication? I am struggling with this because I really *want* to do it all, but the truth is I only have so much time in my day. And a major portion of my time is still dedicated to raising my young children (and will be even more so when the next one comes). For now, I am leaning towards focusing my efforts on essays for publication.

One other piece that having a new baby actually solved for me is that I will definitely not be going back to traditional work in the near term. As I encountered some of the difficulties with freelance work, going back to work seemed like an increasingly desirable option. I’ve definitely missed the clear-cut objectives, regular pay, and health benefits. But that idea will have to be put on hold for the meantime, likely postponed until our newest addition is two.

The other thing that I feel is important to share is my rededication to my investments. I haven’t talked much about finances on The Sanity Plan to date, but it is something I am definitely going to be doing going forward. I have an extensive financial background, both in education and career, and I have been investing for income for about 15 years. I am much more likely to check my stocks than social media, and I would much rather discuss investment strategy than fashion, celebrities, or even politics. In 2016, I really ignored my investments, and they suffered. It was the first year since the recession where I did not make money. Looking back, I was very distracted with trying to figure out my career direction and adjusting to having two young children, but since investing has been my main source of income since I chose to stay home, I needed to get back to giving it the proper time and attention. I’m glad to say these efforts have already paid off in 2017.

To recap my priorities: running my household and caring for the kids, followed by my investments, followed by my writing. And honestly, I am finally coming to terms with the fact that I don’t have time for much else. That doesn’t mean I won’t be making plans to see my friends or exercise or just relaxing. I just needed to get my head clear on how much time I really have during the day and what is the most important to me. I’ve spent many years since becoming a mother feeling stretched too thin across too many areas, feeling so divided that I wasn’t performing my best at any of them.

Part of my Sanity Plan is really keeping a check on that, being careful to be realistic about what I can and can’t take on.

We are super excited about our new addition. With this child, we will have two girls and two boys, in that order. The timing just feels right. When my son was born, our family was going through a big transition, and it really did not go as smoothly as I hoped. My daughter was struggling and yet undiagnosed with Sensory Processing Disorder and my son was a VERY difficult baby. And to top it off, my stepdaughter came to live with us full time when he was six months old. As I’ve mentioned before, it took us a year to fully transition and feel more comfortable. My husband and I can definitely feel the contrast from then to now, and are welcoming the opportunity to give it another shot with our family in a more stable position.

Filed Under: Parenting, Work/Life Tagged With: career, flexible work, goals, pregnancy, SAHM

Sanity Plan Success Stories – Embracing Your Dream Career

March 21, 2017 By Sara M. 11 Comments

Today’s success story comes from a friend with a very similar journey to my own. What I love the most about her story is that it demonstrates that everyone will have a different Sanity Plan, but the end result will be the same:

a sane & manageable life. 

Joelene Wolfe is a mom, wife, marketer, and the creator of Happiness Depends. After many years of following someone else’s dream, she took the big leap to finally follow her dream of acting. And now she is helping others take the 1st step toward their dream career on HappinessDepends.com. 

We’re all a little kooky at times and that’s totally acceptable.  Life would be boring if we weren’t.  However being totally insane and unhappy… now that’s not my cup of tea.  You see, at one point in my life I was miserable.  I was trying to convince myself and everyone around me that I was happy.  Let me tell you, that was exhausting and it nearly drove me to insanity.

I spent my entire career working in the corporate world.  Somewhere deep down inside, though, I knew that it wasn’t what I wanted to do but I was afraid after so many years to make a change.  I mean, that’s usually what holds us back – fear.  Right?

I would come home from work and tell my husband that I was dying a little everyday walking into that office.

Even still, I tried to convince myself otherwise.  My typical day was filled with feeling anxious, unappreciated, and literally like a fish out of water.  There were days that I literally couldn’t breathe. I was not in my element at all.

Here’s the thing… I wasn’t young anymore.  I had an established career that I worked at for years and who the heck would take my dream seriously anyway?   I left that important little detail out.  Didn’t I?  So my dream since the wee age of three was to become an actor.  Yup, you read that correctly.   I also forgot to mention that I was just over forty years old.  I guess if we are to dream, we might as well dream big.

I knew that things at my company weren’t going well and a few of us were ultimately laid off.  Most people would have buried their heads in the sand but not me.  Nope.  To the contrary, I heard angelic music playing in my head.  I was ready.


So, I decided to put an exit strategy in place – my own personal sanity plan.

It was kind of like one of those action films when there seems to be no hope.  Then in the nick of time, the main character goes against all the odds and finds a way out of the situation.  Well my story was exactly like that, minus the special effects and camera man, but you get the gist.

Insanity no more!  No more being tied to a desk doing something I didn’t love for people who didn’t love me.  I seized the moment after many years of procrastinating and shushing my dream. I did not overthink it. I just decided to take that first step.

My 9 step sanity plan was simple really and you can do it too.

  1. Move forward and never look back – the past is the past
  2. Only share your plan with your closest people – avoid naysayers
  3. Force yourself to take an action everyday toward your goal – little steps equal big successes
  4. Read every positive thinking or inspirational book you can get your hands on – what a difference these make
  5. Just go with your flow – that feeling inside that can’t be explained but always knows if you are on the right course
  6. Celebrate the small victories and don’t get hung up on the losses – you are worth it
  7. Learn to relish every moment doing what you love – living in the now is huge
  8. Be truly grateful for everything – both the things you have and things that you want
  9. Envision yourself as the person you plan to be – in all your glory

It really works. Through this process I finally realized that I wasn’t here to live out someone else’s dream.  My sanity plan was solely to live out mine.

So I am thrilled to report that I have been acting for over four years. I have been in many commercials, TV shows, films, videos, ads and many other wonderfully crazy gigs. The great kind of crazy!  I have met so many amazing people and at the end of the day I am proud of myself.  That first baby step led to a life I never thought possible.  In fact, if you would have told me 5 years ago that this is where I would be, I would have thought YOU were the insane one. Yet here I am.

So my advice to you is this – if you are in a career that is not in alignment with your heart, don’t get overwhelmed with all the details of how to get there.  Just decide on your sanity plan and take one small step every day.

“Your time is limited, so don’t waste it living someone else’s life and don’t let the noise of others’ opinions drown out your own inner voice. Most important, have the courage to follow your heart and intuition. They somehow already know what you truly want to become.”  —Steve Jobs

Take that step. Live your dream. Be happy.

 

I love hearing inspirational stories about how people find what really works for them.

Do you have a Sanity Plan success story to share? Let me know in the comments or contact me here. 

Filed Under: Success Stories Tagged With: career, dreams, passion, work

The Bright Side of Trying and Failing

February 1, 2017 By Sara M. 20 Comments

Working on your Sanity Plan is not always straightforward. I suppose if it was, everyone would be living a sane and fulfilling life, with no hiccups or problems.

Things have been a little hairy for me since my son was born. I was laid off when I was in my third trimester, but due to pregnancy complications, I ended up being covered under the firm’s disability plan until 6 weeks after his birth.

For the first year, it was a huge blessing to stay home. We struggled a lot with the transition to two young children and in the same year added my stepdaughter into our home full time. It was the year of transitions.

In the beginning of 2016, though, I felt the need to go back to work. But how could I manage it? I didn’t think I could take on a full-time job because the kids still needed a lot of my attention. Even if we got help during the day, the balance of the childcare would fall on me and I didn’t see how I could handle everything. I was already exhausted. So, that left me with the idea of finding non-traditional work.

I started putting feelers out there. I talked to my old contacts in the industry. And nothing. What I really wanted didn’t fit with working for a large corporation. I wanted to work part time or by contract, 20-30 hours per week or on a commission basis. And there simply weren’t a lot of opportunities like that in my old field. And with only 5 years of industry experience, I didn’t feel like I had enough experience to become a consultant.

I was back to square one. I kept my ears open. I offered free services to several people getting various projects off the ground.

All of this led me to a very unusual opportunity with a startup. Through a family connection, I met a guy who had built an interactive video technology. With only the two founders in the company, they desperately needed someone to round out their heavily technological backgrounds with some business and communications experience. Enter me.

It was so much fun working for a startup. I was fired up by the potential for the technology to really take off. I got to work on so many different projects from creating marketing materials to company social media. I got involved in sales, including pitching the technology to some of the companies I’d worked with in my previous industry. I learned a ton about the digital advertising industry, even researching and reading on my own time.

There was only one glitch. The pay. Well, to clarify, it was the pay and my lack of success in being able to sell the technology. I worked for free for 9 months and finally realized that it just wasn’t working for me. It wasn’t that I didn’t believe in the product or that I felt like I wasn’t doing a particularly good job. It may have been that I was being a little impatient. But more likely, the industry was not quite ready to transition to this type of digital media and I couldn’t know how long it would take before it would.

I began to consider my dream of writing, which was so drastically different that it was hard to switch gears between watching the kids, working for the startup, and my writing. I had to choose.

What really helped is that I have a very good relationship with my boss. And even when we originally discussed me coming on board, I made it very clear that my family comes first and that I wanted the ability to make a graceful exit if it wasn’t working for me. And that is exactly what I did.

I met my boss for lunch and explained the situation. I told him that I believed in his technology, but that it was hard for me to stay motivated when I’m not having successes. I also wanted to free him up to be able to find someone else that might be a better fit for him. Lastly, I offered to be there if he ever needed another body for a presentation or help with marketing materials.

I gave a brand-new opportunity a shot and failed. Not in the way that I feel badly about the “failure,” but more in the way that I can grow and learn from this experience. I tried it and it didn’t work for me. I learned that I don’t like to work for free (who does?). I was willing to do it when I thought there would be pay on the horizon, but I can’t work indefinitely without that extrinsic reward. I also know that I don’t particularly like sales, especially cold calling. It is easier for me to sell to an existing relationship – such as selling as part of an account management role. I also know that I like well-framed projects. When there is a lot of ambiguity about my role, responsibility, or the job that needs to be done, I tend to flounder a little.

And there it is. I tried something new. I gave it quite a bit of effort and it didn’t work out. I actually feel pretty good about it. I learned a ton. And it gave me some great experience. And even though it was without pay, it is still a job that I can lean on to lessen the impact of my motherhood gap should I choose to try to get back into the traditional workforce. It also gave me insights into the workings of a startup that I would not have otherwise experienced. And the experience actually enforced for me even more that I do not want to work in the traditional capacity. I want to be an entrepreneur, choosing how I want to spend my time. I want the flexibility and freedom to be able to spend time with my family when I want or when they need me. That is my Sanity Plan.

Filed Under: Parenting, Work/Life Tagged With: career, freelance, non-traditional work, startup, WAHM, work, working, working moms

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Welcome to THE SANITY PLAN! Here you will find my attempts to restore order in my crazy life post kids. I'm just getting started & I have a lot to say. So far I've written a lot about my perspectives on parenting (sorry, it's where I am at), but I'd love it if you followed my journey to improve my habits, get more organized, redefine my career, and generally live a good life. Or, you can follow just for the entertainment, I promise there will be lots of that. Do you want to learn more about building A Sanity Plan?

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