Blellow: A Productivity Microblog for Professionals

Chase Your Passion

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passion

For some of us it’s Guitars, for other it’s Star Trek, the more sensible ones prefer a walk in the country or relaxing on beaches.  Yes folks, we are talking about Passion.  I would urge you (especially males) to brace yourself for use of the L word more than once in the following.

Before I started the journey of freelancing and self employment I worked for several years in a UK Government department, believe me - you don’t want to know the details, there is no point us both being bored. During my time there I learned a lot, how to prepare budgets, project management, staff management, high level communication and diplomacy…. and much much more. The one thing that I didn’t learn was how to give it 110% of my energy, how to get excited about getting up in the morning and commuting, how to pass my infectious enthusiasm onto others about my work.  And the reason?  My passion slept in a different bed!

So after several years,  several very nice pay rises and promotions I walked away.  I took probably the most foolish step in my life to date and gave up my families financial security to find Love. I wanted to wake up in the morning excited about my day, I wanted to be able to work late into the night and smile about doing it.  I took a giant leap and didn’t look back, it hasn’t been a fairytale whirlwind romance and it hasn’t been easy, but the reason I can weather all storms is that I love what I am doing and my passion to do it is stronger than my desire to quit!

More Powerful Than A Teenagers Hormones - Passion

I am pretty sure that at least one person reading this will know that their passion in life is to create a gingerbread house and spend their last days eating the roof.  Sadly, that passion will not translate well into a freelance environment.  The main reason is one I mentioned earlier, to succeed in working out your passion you must be able to enthuse others about your passion. Your infectious love of ‘whatever’ will spread to those around you, nothing creates a culture of excitement and anticipation like a ‘genuinely’ passionate person.  Take careful note of the word genuine, that is important!

A factor that always features highly in ‘Working for Love’ is the issue of actually making a wage from it.  Many a successful artist has died penniless and in these financially uncertain times our head often rules our hearts, and to a certain extent we have to be realistic.  But I urge you to not let the love of your lives get sidelined for the sake of fear, which by the way, is the only thing that can truly quench your  passion.

If you didn’t see it, take a look at THIS BLOG POST by Mark Sherrick which gives thought to stepping into the world of freelance while still earning a wage. I would lay odds on this being the most practical method of making the switch from Employee to Freelancer, not the path I took but I did say I was foolish!

There are a few things which I have deliberately not discussed here, such as ‘finding your passion’ and ‘making sure you’ll love it in the morning syndrome’ which are very real issues if you’re thinking of taking the leap. But these are probably book worthy as opposed to bloggable topics.  In my next blog post I am going to be looking at how to apply your passion in a practical way and how to creatively implement what others will tell you is a hobby or infeasible idea.

To round up this post I will share a little story.

I have a friend who used to be an air host(not ess…), he loved the travelling aspect of his job, and loved the world, seeing new places, finding hidden gems in far flung corners, but he hated the actual air hosting side of his work which pretty much confined him to the interior of either planes or hotel rooms at airports. While he carried on his work he started a small blog, writing about the places he would discover on his travels. Within a year he had a large following (mainly from people in the same line of work) and he created a membership site with access to more in depth reviews and discoveries.  He contacted me a few months ago to tell me he had quit his job and had been offered a permanent role doing exactly the same thing for a large well known website.  By unleashing his passion, and a small amount of business acumen, my friend is now living his Passion, and loving every minute of it.

Lenny Kravitz says it best…. “Let Love Rule”.

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  • jerryclatham28
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  • Zak
    This is a great post in both core idea and execution; thanks for sharing! When it comes to this topic I think a large majority fall into three general situations:

    ~ Stuck in a position of weighing passion vs. profession for income reasons
    ~ Yet to find anything they are truly passionate about
    ~ Too many passions to just pick one!

    Another hurdle for some is turning our passions into a job, even if it is something profitable, isn't always an easy transition. For artists out there; how much did it change your approach the first time someone offered to pay you for your talent ( a portrait perhaps)?. For people tinkering with websites/design, how much did being 'hired' with a contract and deadline effect your process or motivation to do it ? Did it lose the " fun factor "?

    I personally struggle with the issue of having too many interests and being fairly good at all of them as well as a tendency to lose interest if I'm getting paid. I don't know if I could ever just focus on one and therefore couldn't reliably make one aspect of interest a profession without fear of passion-ADD creeping up. I'd love to interview Michelangelo and dig into just how he juggled all those passions! (not that Im comparing myself of course,heh)

    I can only compare it to standing in the middle of a compass; each direction corresponding to a area of interest I could pursue to a professional level with no indication of any choice making me happier than the other. I doubt this is an unfamiliar feeling for most, but it's certainly been enough to keep me confined to my office cube and sticking with the sure salaried paycheck for several years ( if only I could do systems tech work from a tree-house in Alaska - I'd stay with my company forever ! :P )

    I think if more people knew how to the 'connect the dots' and map out how to viably transform their passion into profession they would be more apt to take the leap even if it meant some reduction of income initially. So, After years of mulling over the idea, an interesting result from the frustration of this personal-passion-pickle is the recent commitment to develop a network of sites dedicated to helping people make this decision and furthermore, provide tools, resources, and articles of inspiration/advice from experts to knowledgeably and responsibly pursue that decision to reality.

    That project being the reason I arrived at Blellow to begin with. ;)

    P.S.I found that link very helpful - if you have any others with that focus do share!
  • Zak - You should totally make a blog post out of the stuff you replied with here...I think it would be a great read.

    Those three divisions are really the deal. I would love to talk to you sometime about your ideas. I appreciate your compliment on my blog post as well...thank you very much.
  • Zak
    Thanks Mark, perhaps when I get some of this into some form of presentable organization I can do a write up on the subject.

    I'll get in contact with you soon.
  • Great. I look forward to it. Lets see what comes out of it.
  • Blellow
    Nik, I agree. I used to work at a large corporation and wasn't very happy. You need to follow your passion!!
  • Thank you for the crossover link Nik!

    Passion is a funny thing...but its always worth following. I advocate the part time thing if you're new to chasing passions, or arent quite sure and don't want to shoot yourself in the foot...but doing it fulltime is a great option for those who can handle it...and it looks like you can. :)
  • Very good points, Nik. I've discovered the same things in my career. At the beginning of the year I had been laid off and was two weeks from not making rent. I had a few opportunities to join back in an office job, stuck in a cubicle and doing the same thing I had been doing for 3 years previous, but I decided to hold off in lieu of finding success freelancing. That's when Blellow scooped me up and gave me my dream job.

    Life is far too short to be stuck working a job that you don't like.
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