Authors: Trent Hamm
Kim Bentz, an administrator in Colorado Springs, Colorado, reflects on making a similar choice. “Up until the time I was about 26, I thought that you were as happy as the personality you were born with or that circumstances allowed you to be. Some people had won the lottery in both of those, having naturally sunny dispositions and having very little trouble in their lives, and some of us were naturally morose, and circumstances and tragedies conspired to keep us that way.
“Naturally I resented happy people, thinking that they had simply won life’s lottery and, but for a twist of fate, that could have been me. Once I was told it was a choice, I began to study happy people. What I found was truly eye-opening. Happy people have no fewer problems than I or anyone else, but they were making a conscious choice to be happy anyway. If they could choose, so could I. The
habit
of unhappiness was deeply ingrained, so it took years for me to really learn how to make that choice.”
4
All of us have barriers in our lives that keep us from accomplishing the things we want and keep us from making profound changes in our lives. Overcoming those barriers is often the real challenge in the process of turning our financial, personal, and professional state around. Here are five steps you can take toward identifying the barriers in your own life and devising solutions for them:
“So, what exactly do you do all day?” My oldest brother Alan leaned across the table. I had just told him about my decision to quit my fulltime job and take up a drastically different lifestyle. Aside from family farmers, I was the first self-employed person in my family. As I described how I now filled my days with a new mix of personal life and professional work, I could see his face change from a look of incredulity to a look of curiosity and interest. “That sounds awesome!” he said. “I wonder if I could do that?”
April 2008
Most of this book has revolved around making changes in a life that you’re unhappy with. In fact, I assume that you picked up and read this book because you are in fact unhappy with your financial or professional position in life, and you’re seeking answers for a better life.
Most of us, however,
are
happy with much of what goes on in our lives. We have friends and family that we
love and care for and who love and care for us. We have a career that we enjoy. We have hobbies and activities that fill our remaining hours in interesting ways.
Yet something still made you pick up this book. Something is still not quite right in your life. Here are a few potential answers for your conundrum.
When I think back to the summer of 2004, I don’t remember the DVDs I bought or the video games I collected or the new furniture we picked up. Instead, the first thought that comes to mind is sitting on a low bridge with my sister-in-law Rachel. It was a hot summer day, and we had both pulled off our shoes to dangle them in the water—and the water was freezing cold.
When I reflect on the high points in my life, I don’t remember
things
. I remember experiences—the people I was with, the activity I was engaged in, and the place where I was doing it.
When I have conversations with my friends, we rarely talk about the things we have. Instead, we talk about our experiences—the things we’re doing in our lives. We don’t brag about the fact that we use the expensive laundry detergent; instead, we talk about the hike we went on last weekend or the ultimate Frisbee game earlier in the week.
Experiences always trump things. Experiences do not require maintenance. They do not take up space in your home. They stay with you in your heart.
Fill your life with experiences. Chase the things you’ve always dreamed of doing, and leave the things on the store shelves where they belong.
“Someday, things will change for me and my ship will come in,” Helen said.
Helen and I had each just gone through a trial by fire at our respective new jobs. Since we were old friends from our college days, we agreed to eat lunch together and effectively allow each other to vent about the difficult and sometimes seemingly unfair challenges we faced.
When I heard Helen talk about her ship coming in, though, I had a strange feeling inside of me. If she keeps sitting there by the dock waiting, her ship will never come in. If she’s genuinely unhappy with things to the point that she’s pinning her hopes on an unforeseen windfall, she’s doing nothing more than ensure the continuation of her own misery.
In Helen’s comment, I saw myself. It scared me, and it made me want to start something new.
July 2004
The title of this section is a truism often attributed to Albert Einstein. It speaks to a fundamental truth about the world:
If you want something different out of life, you need to try something different
and change the rules a bit.
If I had not committed to trying something different in my life, you would not be holding this book in your hands today. Instead, my wife and I would likely be buried up to our necks in debt, I’d still be working in a career that stressed me out while dreaming about another career, and our children wouldn’t be getting the attention that they so richly deserve.
If you want to make change, you have to try something different. If you’ve made it this far in the book, you’ve likely had dozens of ideas for how to make change in your life. As you read through these final pages, ask yourself this:
Do I expect change to happen in my life if I don’t actually do some of these things?
Then close the book and get started.
People often tend to resist making changes in their life because they’re afraid of sticking their neck out. Such fears are based on the idea that we’re essentially helpless, like chickens in a henhouse hoping that the fox doesn’t catch us.
In the real world, success is often earned by the person who does make the change in their life to stand out from the pack. If you strive to hide in the crowd, you’ll simply be passed over time and time again until, of course, you become one of the nameless faces included in the latest downsizing. On the other hand, if you choose change, you stick your neck out—and you’re likely to be the first face seen when opportunity comes knocking.
If you simply keep repeating the behaviors of your friends who spend more than they earn, you’ll continue to slip slowly downward in a spiral of debt. On the other hand, if you choose change, you escape that downward spiral and likely retain all of the powerful positive relationships you had before while only eliminating the negative ones that were pulling you down.
Success comes from being different, not from simply repeating the moves of everyone else.
A thirteen-year-old truck sits in our driveway. I’ve driven it for the better part of a decade, and the wear of a dozen Iowa winters is beginning to show on it. There are a few rust spots around the edges and the paint simply doesn’t glisten any more, even after a good washing and waxing. It doesn’t run all that well, either—it desperately needs a new flywheel and, sometime after that, a new transmission.
Throughout our neighborhood, I can see shiny new vehicles parked in front of people’s homes. In fact, I’d say that my truck is perhaps the oldest vehicle on the block.
At one point in my life, this state of affairs would have bothered me. I would feel jealousy toward the beautiful cars owned by our neighbors and wonder if they thought less of me because of my truck.
After having clawed my way back from the brink of financial destruction, though, I see things a bit differently. Each month, the bills for those beautiful cars arrive in their mailboxes. Each month, those families have to make some hard decisions about what they can afford to do. They have to worry about toeing the line at work and jumping at every suggestion from their manager. They have to tell their children that they won’t be going on a memorable family vacation this year—or else they’ll put the whole thing on plastic and have yet another giant bill to fret about.
Yet, when I stroll through my neighborhood and chat with my neighbors, we see that we’re all equals. We’re all struggling through the challenges of everyday life. We all make mistakes, and we all have triumphs.
It doesn’t really matter, in the big scheme of things, what my neighbors think of my car.
It does the job that I want it to do—taking me to the library and helping me run other local errands.
Does it cause my neighbors to treat me differently? It makes a real difference only to a few of them, and those individuals, by virtue of caring so deeply about what car someone else is driving, are inherently negative people anyway, looking for criteria with which to bring someone else down. As we discussed in
Chapter 9
, “Cultivating People and Opportunities,” one of the best financial moves you can make in your own life is to minimize your negative relationships and stop caring what negative people think.
I buy things that have value to
me
, not because I anticipate the look of jealousy on someone else’s face. Such anticipation is pure negativity, because you are attempting to feel better about yourself due to bringing someone else down.
The less you worry about what others think of what you do, the easier it becomes to blaze your own path in the world without the shackles of debt holding you in place.
The preceding quote was popularized by television and radio personality Dave Ramsey, who often uses it to extol the virtues of getting oneself out of debt.
1
In a much broader sense, however, it represents a key truth about any sort of change we undergo in our lives. Almost always, change feels negative at first. We’re breaking rules. We’re upsetting the expectations others have for us—and the expectations we have for ourselves.
To put it simply, change means choosing to live in a way that’s somehow different than the people around us. We have to make the choice to separate ourselves from what they expect—and what we expect from ourselves—in order to have a chance to touch the dreams we have.
Take me, for example. In my entire circle of friends and family, I knew
no one
that had ever attempted a writing career, let alone a self-employed career of any kind. It was an incredibly difficult choice to make—it took me more than a year to finally make it—and I faced a lot of doubt and resistance from many people in my life.
Looking back, the last two years of my life have been the happiest two years of my life. I made the change for myself, and my life couldn’t be better for it.
Committing to genuine change in one’s life is always an incredibly challenging thing. You have to shatter not only your own ideas, fears, and psychological barriers, but you often have to work through the fears and barriers of others in your life. Here are five final pieces of advice for finding the courage to go your own way: