It’s official. I’m on sabbatical from my job of a decade.
And I know because yesterday was my first day “at work” and I was like, I wonder what I’m supposed to be doing. Just kidding.
Sort of.
More on that in a bit.
In addition to working full time, in 2018 I added part-time author to the mix, which led to 7-day work weeks for months (years) at a time. Can you say burnout? I had it. Bad.
My day job was not time consuming or difficult, but for various reasons (COVID, alignment, household changes, etc.), in recent years I’ve I found it stressful and energy draining. I love the organization and the mission and my coworkers, too! But it was clearly time to step away to find and live my ikigai.
The day I put in my notice was not planned. One day, I really couldn’t take it any more. Between anxiety and extreme fatigue, I had to take immediate action. And I knew it had to be a complete break, not a stepping back or a slowing down.
So I crafted a message and stepped into my truth, fear and all. And after six weeks of knowledge transfer, I put on my out of office in late December, informing anyone who writes me there, that I’ll take a peek again in April (which may turn into… something else).
Before 2023 ended, I began working through the ikigai exercise. Generally understood as your reason for being, your ikigai is the intersection of what you love, what you’re good at, what the world needs and what you can get paid to do. Unsurprisingly, writing came up quite a bit (along with teaching and coaching – also not a surprise). As you might’ve guessed, my focus for the next few months will be writing, writing, writing. I will resume coaching (shout out to my newly earned credential!), but on a limited basis for now.
My third book (!) is due to publish in October 2024, and while the hard part is over, there are still a few more steps in the short term. Yesterday, I took the first one. I’m in copyedits, which means I’m polishing the manuscript.
I started with a baby step – one chapter – my favorite approach, just to make sure I knew what was I doing and also to ease myself back into this project that I haven’t seen in about two months. Today I had a bigger goal – five to seven chapters – and met it within two hours, which is great because I allocated four. So that’s my work for the next week – polishing the rest of my new book! I aim to finish this round by next Friday if all goes according to plan.
Soon I will tell you about my first bullet journal, which arrived today. I’ve never attempted this organization strategy, but I’m hoping it will be useful and fun. Have you ever used a bullet journal? How did it go for you?
I am so grateful that you’re engaging this medium again!
Your learning, growth, and dedication over the past few years has been incredibly inspiring. May it all prove rewarding to you mentally, emotionally, spiritually, personally, professionally, physically, and financially.
And, although I’m sure I’ve heard of Ikigai before, this time it has resonated in a way that I can apply to so many areas of my life, and as I move closer to 60, it seems a fitting time to take stock of where I am and where I want to be in the next few years.
Thank you. Happy new year. I’m grateful to and for you!
Feeling every bit of this. Super encouraged to chant about living my ikigai. I’m loving my career and have some extra time on my hands. I want desperately to turn that time into streams of income; however, still challenged with what that looks like. As always, Dr Coco giving me food for thought – thank you! 😉