Good Life Project - When Success Becomes Empty: Rediscovering Purpose Beyond Ambition | Jenn Romolini
Episode Date: December 5, 2024Jenn Romolini was a high-powered editor who appeared to have it all - until a health crisis forced her to reevaluate her all-consuming ambition. In this candid conversation, Romolini shares her journe...y from corporate overachiever to redefining success on her own terms, as detailed in her memoir Ambition Monster. Discover how shifting her mindset allowed her to embrace what truly matters beyond professional accolades.You can find Jenn at: extended scenes Substack | Instagram | Episode TranscriptIf you LOVED this episode you’ll also love the conversations we had with Jen Sincero about transforming your life.Check out our offerings & partners: Join My New Writing Project: Awake at the WheelVisit Our Sponsor Page For Great Resources & Discount Codes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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I am ambitious to feel content. I don't expect happiness every day, but I am ambitious to feel
a sense of equanimity in my life. You can't find when your life is out of balance. And I am
ambitious to invest in friendship, which is something I've really lacked for the majority
of my life and is so important, especially as you get older, right? And just being a good person.
How do I show up every day?
Those are things you need space and time to think about.
We don't just come out being good people who know how to manage ourselves in the world.
And many of our childhoods don't help with that, right?
So it takes work and it takes effort.
And that's something to be ambitious for. Being a person who means something in other people's
lives, all of those things. That's how I calculate if I'm a success now.
So ambition is this loaded word. It's often associated with this relentless drive to succeed,
trampling over others as you scrap your way to the top,
ignoring your well-being, your relationships,
any sense of groundedness or meaning or peace or joy along the way.
It's what helps you achieve, quote, success, we're told.
But what if that was not only wrong,
but it also kept you from the work, the relationships, the health, the life,
a different kind of success
that you didn't just want, but that was actually worth wanting, that would make you feel the way
you want to feel. Well, today's guest, Jan Romolini, shares her deeply personal journey,
rising to the very top of the New York media world, up in the C-suite, then untangling from that toxic
drive and letting go of an ambition that didn't align with who she was, her core values, her
aspirations, to reclaim something deeper and better. Jen is the author of the raw and emotional
memoir, Ambition Monster, a memoir about her reckoning with workaholism and obsession with work that really just stemmed from her childhood experiences.
And first as a rising star in the near publishing world,
she really appeared to have it all.
The coveted career, the money, the status.
But beneath that picture-perfect exterior,
the relentless ambition was disconnecting her from her truest self
and what really mattered most.
And it took a health crisis
to forcibly hit pause and have Jen reassess everything. In this intimate conversation,
she shares how losing her voice, I mean literally losing her voice, became a wake-up call that
allowed her to find it again, but in a different way. From realizing her workaholism was a trauma
response, to grappling with external measures of of success and finally breaking free and realigning with her core creative calling as a writer.
Jen's path shows that there is another way.
One where blind ambition doesn't crowd out relationships or well-being and what you value most. So if you've ever felt confined by others' versions of what ambition and success should look like,
Jen's story offers some real hope for rediscovering and living congruently with your own authentic aspirations.
Her perspective will really inspire you to get radically honest about what truly constitutes a good life for you.
So excited to share this conversation with you.
I'm Jonathan Fields, and this is Good
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I feel like the word ambition, the experience ambition, conversations around ambition,
success, what they mean, what they don't mean, and how we're wired for them has entered the
zeitgeist a lot more since we found ourselves coming out of the pandemic. And maybe that's
just me, but I feel like that was this moment where so many people really re-examined what
is a thing called work that I'm doing?
How will I bring myself to it? What's it giving me back to me? And this ambition I've been striving for, like the work, work, work, I'm going for the brass ring. Is that really what I want?
I'm curious whether you feel like there's been sort of like a re-emergence or re-examination
the last couple of years too. Oh, I think for sure. I mean, I think we see it with all of the burnout books that came out a few years ago. I think we see it as a correction to the sort
of girl boss of the 2010s. I think we see it as the midlife crisis of Gen X, who were really the
recipients of the women's rights movement and really the first generation
that fully was working, just all out ambition. And I think that there was a sort of collective
during the pandemic feeling about work as a highest measure of a life success. This feeling
of, is that all there is? Wait,
is that it? I'm not sure that's really it. I do think to some degree, I mean, and certainly
there's the trend of quiet quitting and there's the lazy girl job, all of those things. I don't
know if we've gotten it quite right yet, because now I think the pendulum is swinging a little too far to the other side.
Because what we're not talking about is the gratification that can come from ambition
and achieving goals, if those goals are personal, and if those goals are not about some external
idea of what you're supposed to be. No, I think that is such an important part
of the conversation and I agree.
I feel like it isn't getting centered nearly as much.
I think we tend to look at ambition or success
and say, it's either good or bad.
It's a binary thing.
It's like, eh, not so much.
You know, it's like, what's driving that?
What's underneath that?
If you're devoting yourself to something really deep
and profound and meaningful and joyful,
it can be incredibly powerful. But it also doesn't protect you from things like burnout and overwork and workaholism. You can experience all those even doing something that on the most fundamental level you would think would be pretty nourishing. no, I would say, because I think that there is a situation that happens when you are doing work for yourself and you know, this is the path I want to be on. This isn't about external validation.
This is, I've really examined myself in my life and I've thought, what do I really want to do
before I die? Right. And you sort of backed yourself from there. I have found, because I am certainly a
workaholic and I absolutely love work. And I have found that when the goal is personal and I am just
hustling for it, I feel rejuvenated by the energy that I'm putting into work, even if it's excessive. But when it's for something else,
for a way that I think I'm supposed to be in the world, whether it's for checking boxes,
you know, oh, I should go for this promotion. I should take this dream job. I would be crazy not
to. Those kinds of things, those kinds of motivations, those are the things that deplete us.
Yeah. It's almost like, are you building something that is an emanation of you,
or are you trying to fill a hole that was probably dug at least in part by any number of other
people? Yes. Yes. Are you living a life of purpose that aligns with your values? Are you able to grow in whatever you're doing? You know, I think that especially for not because I have to, and not even necessarily
that I'm going to get a reward that's going to sustain me or my family, but because I want to
be considered good. I want that validation. And again, that's external. And that's when we get
into trouble with ambition, I think. Let's deconstruct those stories that we, I think, where the seed gets planted when we're
pretty young about work and ambition and success.
And you write so powerfully about this in your book.
You had very specific experiences and stories coming from your family culture, like certain
ones coming from your mom and a sense of competitiveness with playfulness that could
also sometimes go off the rails. And then on your dad's side too, with sort of like a really,
an interesting framing around strength and vulnerability and winning. Take me into this
a bit because it's really fascinating the way that those sort of like showed up in your life
and then almost like laid down patterns that stayed with you. I am most certainly a product
of the American dream. My parents were teenagers when they had me.
Neither of them had high school educations, but they lived and they built from that a business,
or my father did, got us out of what was lower class, lower class life, not necessarily poverty,
but certainly lower class, into an upper middle class life, which necessarily poverty, but certainly lower class into an upper middle
class life, which took a lot of hustle and took everything that we are told about the American
dream. It was nonstop work. It was persistence. It was all of it. I don't know if that was work
that was satisfying to him, but that wasn't really part of the equation, right? It was about survival and salvation.
And my parents had very traditional gender roles. My mother ran a household. She wound up having
two other children after me and my father worked. And my mother had me when she was just turned 17.
She was always telling me, never be reliant on a man, always make your own money. They had a tumultuous
relationship. I mean, as you do when you are teenagers, but he had all the power and he had
the power because he made the money. And I watched that for sure. And then the other side of this,
I had this really hard working. And let me say, my parents are people of immense integrity. I love
them very much. But of course, you get to a certain age and you start to examine, how did I get here?
And you start to pick things apart a bit. My father just had more power in the house.
And he just had more freedom because of how much he worked. But also also our extended family and our immediate family, we all sort of exalted
him because he gave us, he provided for us. He provided our lives, but he worked constantly.
I had very little relationship with him growing up. I craved a relationship with him. And so
when I was 13, I said to him, can I start working for you? I wanted to be close to
him. I wanted to be in his world. And I did not want my mother's life, which was about cleaning
up after everyone. And it seemed so thankless what she had to do and running a home. And that messaging really brought me into the working world. But then, of course, a blue collar life and a working class life and what ambition looks like in those environments is very different than what it looks like in a white collar world, which is where I eventually landed. I mean, you go from there seeing like a very strong work ethic and a devotion to family and like providing and do what you need to do.
And then you land eventually over a period of years, it's really the New York City magazine,
media and tech world, the blend of all those in different, which is a radically different work
culture and radically different work environment.
On the one hand, it gives you all the opportunity in the world to effectively work until you die.
Absolutely, yes.
Which if you're wired in a particular way, which you were coming into this, you're like,
okay, here we go.
Well, I had a lot to prove too, right? Because I didn't have a pedigree.
I was really a fish out of water in those sort of upper class environments, especially in
magazines, especially in lifestyle magazines where you're selling sort of prestige to other people,
you're an arbiter of taste. But the thing that surprised me the most in white collar environments
was I really had expected work to be a meritocracy because in a lot of blue collar
jobs, that's kind of how it is. Like you work hard, you are rewarded. I was a waitress for
a decade. The more work I put in, the more money I made. It was a very simple equation.
And that is not the case in corporate America. In fact, you might actually be worse off the harder you work,
because you become like a sucker. You're a receptacle for everybody else's slacking off.
If you don't know how to play the game and you're just like hustling, hustling, hustling,
it really doesn't reward you that much unless it's incredibly strategic.
Yeah. I mean, that makes a lot of sense. And I think so many people have probably found themselves
in that spot also where they're like, they show up, they work incredibly hard. Other people see
them working incredibly hard. They're like, oh, here's somebody who's going to get everything.
Well, it's that classic phrase, right? And like, if you want to get something done,
give it to a busy person, which is, hey, great for you as the giver. But like that busy person
becomes known as the person that gets
stuff done person. And all of a sudden, they're just getting crushed because everybody's starting
to say, oh, I'll give it to the busy person. I know they'll do whatever they need to do to get
it done. I feel like oftentimes in corporate culture, that that person gets pigeonholed
as being that person. And nobody wants them to leave that
sort of pigeonholing because it means that the work comes back to them.
Well, corporate systems, from my experience, they don't really reward competence as much
as they reward survival, right? Break that down more for me. So say a job has a set of goals and expectations,
right? You can sort out how to do those and just those, never going above and beyond,
but also work strategically to curry favor with a boss, to understand the corporate political system. And that employee
who puts in minimal work, but understands the politics of the system and is strategic,
is going to succeed far more than the employee who is constantly working, nose to the grindstone,
and doing more and more in that role. Because like
you said, we want to keep that person in that role. We don't want to move them up. Why would
we? I moved up quite a bit. I was kind of both. I was both strategic and I worked maniacally.
So I rose through the ranks because I also kept thinking, well, with the next promotion and the next raise, I'm going to feel satisfied. If I could just get there, then I wouldn't have all
this other stuff they don't like doing. Maybe I'll like that stuff more, but also power. I thought,
you know, I just need to get a little more power and then I'm going to feel less disempowered.
But none of that turned out to be the case. So as you find yourself in that world, in that life, working like crazy, rising up,
being in some levels rewarded for at least externally, what's happening on the inside
for you?
There's, I think it's the Buddhist phrase, external riches, internal rot.
I was so on the train, in the wheel, on the ride, however you want to say it. I couldn't think
about anything else. It became all consuming for me. And it was to the detriment of and to the
neglect of almost everything else in my life. I think the only thing that I managed to eke out as successful as work
is I managed to be a present parent as much as I could be. That's really all I had though.
And I didn't really have any fortifying friendships outside of work, which I had
friendships with my employees, but then you're just in it and in it and in it because you're
just talking about work all the time. I wasn't really tending to my marriage, but more than anything, I just wasn't an interesting
person anymore. I only cared about work. And work is so boring, really. The ins and outs of work are
really kind of boring. And it was all I would really talk about to anybody. And I would see, I could tell that it wasn't landing. Who wants to know about your internal, like your CEO and how you think they're messing things up? Nobody wants to talk about that. But when you are fixated, I was hyper fixated and I had no escape. I had nothing outside of, I really lost so much of the breadth of my life.
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We need him.
Y'all need a pilot.
Flight risk.
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Have you heard or become familiar with the research around harmonious versus obsessive passion?
No, no, but I'm interested.
This was shared with me by a friend of mine who also, he's a positive psychology guy and teaches at NYU also.
And apparently there's this fascinating research around passion and divides it into these two different types of passion.
One is harmonious.
One is labeled obsessive. The obsessive kind of sounds like what it is. You take an interest,
you develop it into something which is all consuming. You go all in. Basically everything in your life, but the pursuit of that passion vanishes away. This is the only thing that exists
for you in life. And you just,
you immerse yourself in it. You get completely and utterly lost in it. The other version is
harmonious passion, which I'll kind of bastardize the way I'm describing it, but it's basically,
it's something that is a deep interest for you. It's a passion. You love doing it. You devote
yourself to it. And at the same time, you make room in your life for all the other things,
for the relationships, for the other interests and passions and hobbies, for taking care of your physical and mental health.
So it exists in harmony with these other things that if you look at your values, you say you
hold dear.
What was fascinating to me, because I asked him about this research, and I'm curious what
your take is on this.
I said, okay, I get that, right?
So maybe the harmonious passion person, they flourish more as a human being, but doesn't the obsessive person actually probably accomplish more and like,
like get the thing that they're working towards at a higher level or faster. I said, the research
actually says, no, the harmonious passion is the one who's more likely to. And the reason looks
like it's because, you know, you're going to have a ton of adversity when you're, when you're going that hard and trying to be the best in this one thing and, you know, like achieve the
top.
You're going to get knocked back a whole bunch, which means you need resilience.
And to really have a wellspring to build on, to have that resilience, to navigate those
moments, you need something outside of the work to actually turn to, to be able to breathe
again.
I'm curious what your take is
on sort of like that. Even now, you saying that, I'm a little torn because in my line of work,
it's so much about detail and it is obsessive to a degree. That period should not go there.
That image does not sell that story as well as it could. All of those small details that add up to a really
quality product. And if you don't have the fire for that, then you're kind of churning out mediocre
work, in my opinion. However, I see the point when you're not in balance and you're dysregulated, and particularly if you keep going obsessively,
you will burn out.
And once you reach a place of burnout, then your effort toward the work, it's not what
anyone would want.
So I feel like it is all about balance.
And of course, that balance is harmony.
When you think about the way that you were driving towards the work that you
were doing, it sounds like it was pretty much on the obsessive side of things, with that one
exception of trying to be a present parent as much as you could. This all comes to a head at some
point. You write about actually in your books, sort of like a moment where you're delivering a
speech, and it doesn't actually go the way you planned.
Well, I'd been neglecting my health and I had had a number of things and I just was blowing through the signals. Your body, the body keeps the score, whole thing.
I was blowing through a number of signals. I'd had a lot of, I'd had a classic 80s stockbroker dad, like ulcer, you know, I had had, I had really terrible
headaches. I, you know, I was grinding my teeth. I like I chewed through like a couple of mouth
guards, etc. But I kept going because those actually I could keep going, didn't matter.
And then what happened was I had my voice basically failed. I wound up having several polyps on my vocal cords.
And a doctor had told me, you need to slow down. You need to not be talking so much. In the
meantime, I was giving a couple of speeches a month, plus running several meetings a day on
the phone all day, talking in loud coffee shops with the writers I was trying to recruit,
just talking, talking, talking, talking. And I was standing on this stage giving this keynote speech, and I went to say a word,
and I couldn't.
And it was just like a strange, haunting gasp came through instead of a word.
And it was terrifying.
And then I wound up after that, long story short, I didn't really
follow the doctor's instructions. It got worse. My vocal cords started bleeding. It was in danger
territory and I had to get surgery. And after the surgery, I couldn't speak for two weeks.
You have to absolutely be silent because when you speak, your vocal cords touch. And if they've been in surgery, you could now damage them permanently. So I took this very seriously,
but it didn't stop working. And once I couldn't be a participant in the game, I got to watch it
as an audience member. And I didn't like what I saw. It was the best thing that ever happened to
me because I really don't know that I would have taken a step back and really examined my life in
that way if I hadn't been forced to. It changed my whole life.
What was it that you did see? What were you seeing?
I just saw the jockeying and the callousness of the people I worked with, my bosses. It's like a game that I wasn't interested in playing. A lot of what I really regret about my years as a high-level manager, I was in the C-suite at this point, was that I made decisions that were maybe good for business, or I was kind of
forced to make decisions that were maybe good for business, but didn't align with how I felt and who
I was. There are people who are really good managers, leaders, who have no problem making
those kinds of hard decisions, but I did have a problem. I didn't like when I was asked to fire
somebody who was on maternity leave, for example. I didn't like a lot of the things that I did. I didn't like when I was asked to fire somebody who was on maternity leave, for example.
I didn't like a lot of the things that I did. I didn't like laughing along with some flaccid
jokes from a boss just because that's what we have to do here. I didn't really love playing
the corporate game ever, but because I wasn't being mindful as I was climbing the ladder. By the time I got there,
I just felt kind of wedged in and stuck. I hadn't really thought like every step of the way,
I wasn't thinking, is this what I want? Is this right for me? I was just doing it because I
thought I should. And so when I was able to take that step back, I was kind of shocked. I was like,
wait, I don't belong here. This isn't right for
me. And even then I didn't leave because I was too afraid. Afraid of what? I was afraid the way
it would look on my resume, which seems ridiculous now because I've endured so much tumult in my
resume. It doesn't matter. Like none of that matters. You think it matters so much, like
intention matters so much more. I was afraid
of losing my health insurance, which was a big deal. I didn't realize at the time,
oh, well, if you just earn an extra amount of money, I can pay for health insurance out of
my own pocket. I just need to rearrange some things and cut some things and maybe
stop outsourcing so many things in my life. I could earn a lot less.
And I think you don't realize that either when you're earning more.
And I had scarcity issues. I had big scarcity issues from growing up.
My sister and brother grew up upper middle class, but I grew up lower class. And I had real scarcity
issues around money. And so once I started making some,
I was very scared that I wouldn't be able to survive without making that much.
Which is completely understandable. These are the patterns that get laid down,
the tracks that we have when we're kids. And unless and until something happens to really
rewire those, it's like, they stay with us until we actually do something to sort of question them
and say like, huh, is this true?
Is this the only way to be?
Yeah.
And I had sort of lost that.
And it was really interesting because it was the provider thing.
Once I had a child, I was the breadwinner of our family.
And I felt like it was what I was supposed to do.
And I abandoned myself completely
in the process. You know, I was a creative person. I was a writer. I always wanted to write books.
And at some point I just, I got so far off path and I missed myself, honestly.
Did you have a sense, I think having this conversation now, I think you probably have a really strong sense for who you are and who you've always been. If you can take yourself back there to sort of like this moment where you're starting to really wake up to like something's not right here. Did you have a sense for really who you were back then? Or were you so far from it that you couldn't actually really connect to it in that moment. And I think this happens to a lot of kids who it's, you know, it's called, there's a
connection between workaholism and something called parentification, right?
Where you have, you come from a tumultuous home, chaotic home, you have expectations
put on you from a young age. I was a very sensitive, creative, weird kid in a tough working class family.
And I think that I never really embraced who I really was because I didn't think it was the
right way to be in the world. And also I thought that the way I really was, the soft, tender way I really was, the creative, gentle person I was, was not going to survive. I mean, I was told that overt, and I could hold my own, and I could out-tough them, and I could be as ruthless as they were, I thought, well, this feels bad. But look at me doing this. This is amazing that I can do this. And then part of it was gender too. I felt a responsibility. I was
one of the few female corporate leaders in my department. I felt a sense of responsibility
and accomplishment that even if it wasn't satisfying, I felt like, well, if I can do this
and I'm really good at it, clearly, maybe I should do it. And I think that's
something that's really difficult is when you are really good at something you don't like,
you know, like when we excel for whatever our makeup is. And I would say not to throw the T
word around, but I think that the majority of my success was because of trauma response. I'm
incredibly hypervigilant. I, you know, All of these things, right? So I was basically dysregulated all the time. I was hypervigilant.
I was always looking for danger everywhere. So it made me an incredible employee.
I've often used the phrase just because you could doesn't mean you should. It's such an
interesting conundrum. If you are really
good at something, whether through hard work and skill development, or maybe just naturally like
this is your gift, there is this sense of obligation that we tend to have to be like,
oh, this is, I have to do this thing. And especially if you see that that thing is well rewarded, it gives you status, it
gives you money and or it genuinely helps the organization or community or someone that
you want to be in service of.
You're like, this is the thing I'm here to do because I wouldn't be so good at it if
it wasn't that way.
And I feel like we give so much energy and oftentimes so many years or decades of our
lives and our careers
to doing that out of a sense of obligation, not genuine interest or passion or meaning or purpose.
For sure. I mean, the whole system is set up to reward exactly that behavior. By the end,
I was really rewarded for this. I remember Cosmo called me up and they said,
you know, we want to feature you in this regular column we do called Get Her Life.
And I was like, are you kidding? You're like, if only you knew.
You know, it was like, I had a dream job, you know, I had this coveted life. I almost felt
ungrateful that I was so unhappy. And it's hard to break
yourself out of that. It takes a lot of courage to bust out of that kind of societal norm, I think,
and convention. I feel like for a lot of people, you can sort of layer on shame.
Like, I shouldn't feel this way. So many other people would quote, like,
want to be in this position. And for me, I'm just feel this way. So many other people would quote, like, want to be in
this position, you know, like, and for me, I'm just sitting here feeling miserable about it or
complaining about it, even if not externally, internally, like to myself, and who am I to be
complaining about this, you know, that's shameful behavior. And it just and then it creates an even
worse spin cycle. Exactly. Or, of course, I have agency, I can change this, I can take these
skills, and I could go to another place. And maybe that will be better. And may you know,
there has to be a way to fix this, right? It can't be it can't be that I just shouldn't be doing this.
That's silly. Of course, I'm an executive, look at me. And then of course, you get some clout,
and you get a reputation and all of those things. And all of these things, all of these like micro addictions sort of add up, you know, work is a behavior addiction. It's
a process addiction. So eventually you do feel a sort of sense of helplessness and you feel like
it's carrying you away in a way. When you end up having surgery on your vocal cords and you have this two-week window you were physically unable to contribute vocally,
it made your brain just default to seeing so much of what you didn't see before, both internally,
but also around you, like what was unfolding around you on a day-to-day basis between you,
between other people, like as they talk, like related to themselves and maybe even like
larger dynamics, power structures, just the way
that people treat each other, even the mood, the affect, the energy of people. I wonder if that
all started flooding in once you were forced to create that space. Absolutely. That's absolutely
correct. I think that I quieted my mind. I literally quieted my mind because I wasn't talking, right? And I could feel things more
profoundly. And I had a visceral disgust from what I was hearing because I wasn't trying to
win the game. I was just looking at the game. I just remember sitting in these meetings
and watching ill-thought-out strategies. That's a big thing that happens in jobs, right?
Like somebody is just presenting one ill-thought-out. It's like they're just trying to
get on the board, right? Nobody's thinking, is this going to work? Is it not? Or this one person
is making a big case. And it's so much noise. So much of these dynamics in these meetings are just noise. And when I wasn't concerned,
or I couldn't be concerned about, you know, when it came to my turn, what noise am I going to
put out? You know, I really just was like, this is stupid. This is all stupid and silly. And I
am getting very stressed out by something that is stupid and silly.
And I am spending the majority of my life, of my waking hours, thinking about something
and contributing to an organization for work I don't really respect, I don't believe in,
for people who don't really respect me and don't align with how I think the world should be.
And in that moment, I was not courageous. I didn't have some big network speech and storm out.
I just stopped working quite as hard. And then within six months, I was fired.
I had reputationally been brought on because everybody knew that I would do anything.
I would plow through a wall to get it done.
And I stopped being that person, which meant I was no longer right for the role.
And I was fired.
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It's also the thinnest Apple Watch ever,
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Mayday, mayday.
We've been compromised.
The pilot's a hitman.
I knew you were going to be fun.
On January 24th.
Tell me how to fly this thing.
Mark Wahlberg.
You know what the difference between me and you is?
You're going to die.
Don't shoot him, we need him.
Y'all need a pilot?
Flight Risk.
You know, on the one hand, you're like, okay, what a fantastic experience.
Or what a great window for you to now step back and say, okay, let me reflect on all this.
Let me see what I really want.
How do I step back into this world of work in a way that feels more holistic and supportive? But on the other hand, as you described, you're the primary breadwinner. There are practical
concerns here because I think folks may hear stories like this and like, well, that's great,
but I've got to pay the rent. I got to pay the mortgage. I'm the person who actually takes care
of the family and all this. You were that person also. This was on you. So how do you start to navigate, do this dance where
it's like, okay, I need to figure out a different way. Where I came from, I can't go back there.
Something has changed in me. There has to be a different way forward. But at the same time,
you're living the trappings of a life that has built around the rewards generated by
working that way and being that person for years.
That's not necessarily an easy thing to unwind.
No, it was not an easy. And let me say, I think that because I grew up without a lot of money,
I'm sometimes confused when I'm talking about things like class. I think that I still think of myself as a working class person, even though I'm not. I'm a
white collar person. I made some money. My husband and I had saved up enough money to buy a house.
And when I got fired, I said, I can't get another job for a while. It was like everything had come up for me and I felt very like I couldn't get myself back
online. I just felt very disoriented and I knew that I just couldn't proceed as normal. And so
we didn't wind up buying that house. And I took a little bit of a break. I was working a lot
freelance, but I never went back to a big job. And I changed the trajectory of our life. I changed us
from upper middle class people to middle class people. And we had to make that decision. And
I realized being able to make that decision is an incredibly privileged thing to be able to make.
And I'm so aware of that. But it was a decision for the health of our family. I feel like for
the health of my marriage, for my
relationship with my child, all of those things, it was the right decision for us to make. And
we just financially, at least, began living a much smaller life. And one thing that I did
almost immediately coming out of that was I had never really understood money. I didn't grow up
having it, so I never really understood it. I was a very self-flagellating person, and I feel like I
didn't care about myself enough to respect my money and to consider financial education a kind
of self-care, right, and protection. So I really, for the first time in my life in my mid forties, educated myself about
money. And that was really, really helpful because then I could understand, well, all right,
yeah, we can live on less and all right, well, what are our dreams really? And how do we keep
ourselves safe for retirement as we make this transition? Safe-ish, you know? I had never invested in myself
in that way. And that I think is one of the most important things that came out of this,
because you can keep making money and just throwing it in a bag somewhere. I just didn't
understand it. I was like throwing it in a bag and then throw it in the backyard and burn it.
I didn't get what you were supposed to do.
And now I do. And I feel like I really grew up too. Because like any addiction, if you are working
all the time, your development is arresting a little bit because you're not thinking, you're not
living, you're not growing. It sounds like also money was one of those patterns that got laid down when you were
a kid.
And decades later, this was the first time where you go back and revisit that and say,
huh, this was a level of understanding that has been guiding me up until this point in
life.
And maybe it's time to question if that's serving me and the choices that I want to
make moving forward and to really do the research, do the education
to be able to say,
I need to write my own rules around money
so that that can power the decisions
that I make moving forward
in a way that honors me more,
not necessarily the rules that were passed on to me
when I was a kid
and the mindset probably around it as well,
so that I can build on that to make decisions about how I now want to step back into the world
of work and life in a way that feels more nourishing. It's interesting. You said we
were living a financially smaller life, but I wonder if at the same time, you still felt a bigger sense of freedom? Oh, for sure. For sure. I can't tell you
the kind of satisfaction that my work has brought me in the past five years and the joy of it,
and the freedom for sure. I think that all of the money definitely, but also just my decisions that I now
make about my career, it's all about intentionality. It's all thoughtful. It's very
personal. My definition of success is very personal. I don't make decisions anymore with
my LinkedIn profile top of mind. I don't care what things look like to the outside world.
That's the biggest shift for me.
What that's resulted in is a well of deep satisfaction
and also a real sense of accomplishment
because I've done a couple of things in the last few years
that I never thought I could do, but I always wanted to do. That's real success.
So tell me about some of those things.
Well, I wrote this book, and it's the best work I've ever done. I always wanted to be a,
quote, real writer, and it's a real book, and I'm a real writer.
I love that you've been writing for literally your entire double life, and you still
didn't think of yourself
as a quote real writer until you sort of like had this book out.
Well, I think even that, even creative work, even creative projects can be done for you or
for someone else. And this book was really for me. And when I finished it, I really had that like,
oh, I did it. I knew I had done it. I had satisfied what I set out to do. And so the external reaction didn't really
matter to me as much because the success was already there before anyone ever read it.
And then I chased down a project that I had been thinking about for 20 years. It basically would
have been a hobby. I'd been collecting these old magazines for years and I turned it into a narrative podcast. And so I got to write a
documentary podcast. And it was so challenging to write in this new form. And my brain was working
in this whole new way. And I was really learning. I was so active and so engaged. And it was really
hard work. And some weeks I worked on it every single day of the week, but I never got
burned out from it because the brain loves competence. The brain loves acquiring skills,
right? We love it so much. And I knew I was no longer stuck. I was like, oh, I'm in a whole
new journey here with this. And every day felt like a delight. It was that beginner's mind, like,
oh, how do I puzzle over this? And I was really able to let my ego, put my ego aside,
even as like an older, middle-aged person and have like younger people teach me things too,
which is not easy to do. I think that's part of why we get stuck as we get older. It's like,
I don't know, this is really humbling that I don't know this.
Yeah, it's funny. I had a friend who I haven't been in touch with for quite a while, actually, but she was in the magazine world in New York for, I want to say 30 years, you know, like the highest levels also. And she turned 52. She decided that she wanted to be a physician. She had to go back to undergrad, take her prerequisites,
like bio and basic health science prerequisites for two years to then apply to med school.
And I remember her talking to her and be like, she's in class with 19-year-old kids and she's
in her mid-50s. And I was like, how is that for you? And she's terrifying and amazing.
Yes.
Because I know these kids actually don't know why they're here. I know why I'm here. And she's like terrifying and amazing. Yes. Because I know these kids actually don't know why
they're here. I know why I'm here. And that's amazing. Yes. And as we get older, it's like so
much better to be scared than bored. You know, it's just, it just really is. And just that sense
of possibility and that sense of wonder you get from really being interested in something and knowing that you
don't know anything about it. Just having that desire again, like you did when you were young.
I wouldn't trade that for anything.
So agree. Over these last few years, as you're re-imagining so much, what becomes important to
you? In your mind, what are the criteria that make you say yes
and no? The number one thing for me is community at this point. Friendships, community, family,
that's the number one thing, protecting that as much as I can. When I got fired, my child was
eight. And I was acutely aware of how fast that first eight years had gone. And I knew how
fast the next eight were going to go. So I don't work after three anymore. I work early. I started
six, but I never took jobs in the times I was freelance. I never took jobs that would require
me to send emails after three. I don't want to be in two places at once anymore. That was the
biggest thing.
Boundaries around work was really my biggest issue.
And I really needed to set that. And then, you know, I really think about commitment.
Do I want to commit to this?
Not just for money, but understanding that my time on the planet is finite.
And do I want to, unless I absolutely have to,
engage with something for hours that I don't enjoy, that I might be good at, but I absolutely
hate. Now, sometimes you just do work because it is survival and you need to grab that bag.
Like freelancers, it's a hustle. Gobbling together a salary is no joke. But I am very clear with myself that there has to be a
purpose. And maybe that purpose is, well, this will pay rent for the next six months.
But if not, I'm not taking it on. The difference is, is I'd rather be not working than working
on something I don't like. And that was not the way it was
before. I think I was afraid of myself before and I didn't like time that was not working because I
didn't want to be exploring my brain or chilling out with my husband or whatever it was because
I didn't know how to really to be a person. Yeah. I mean, I wonder if also sometimes when
your work absolutely consumes all your waking hours and you do have this other
person in your life, but you're really not interacting with them in a whole lot in a deep
and meaningful way that when you get dropped back into it, if you almost have to relearn
how to be with each other now that you're actually sort of like, it's a very different
context and dynamic. For sure. And the power dynamic for us certainly changed because, like I said in the very beginning of this, the person who makes all the money is in a different power position than the person who doesn't.
And our playing field was certainly leveled when I stopped making all the money, which was among the better things that's ever happened to our 20-year marriage. But one question I do ask
myself all the time is, am I behaving like a person who wants to be married? Is the way I've
approached this situation, is the space I'm giving this person, are these the actions of a person who
wants to stay married? How is this going to come across to this person? And if you are all consumed with something else
and not present, you don't have time to think those things out. And so you really lose
consideration. You wind up like just barking things at a spouse and just being like, well,
we just have to get through this. This is just the time. I think having the time,
the privilege of the time to slow things down in my life
has been a big priority for me. I wonder also, and you write about this,
you spent some time working with an Irish cannabis media project.
I did. But also you being able to just see a different culture, a different way that people
explore work and life. Did that meaningfully
inform sort of like the way that you're looking at the relationship now as well?
For sure. Yeah. The company I worked for was based in Ireland. And it was so funny because I'd get on,
you know, and because of the time difference, I'm in Los Angeles. I was dealing with people all the
way, you know, in Ireland. And I would get on at 5am and I would
open up the Zoom. I always had a meeting every morning at 5am and I would open up the Zoom.
And, you know, here I am, I'm chipper and ready to go. And like half the people would be missing.
And I would say, hey, Johnny, where is everyone? And he would say, oh, well, they have the day off.
And it's because they have dozens of state sanctioned
days off a month that they have, I mean, a year that they have to take, right? So every month,
you have several employees out and it's just the way it works. It's just somebody's always out and
it's fine, actually. The people I worked with, I don't know if this is how everyone works in,
say, the UK, but the people I worked with, they logged in at a certain time and they locked out at another time. And that was it. If I sent them an email after hours, they were
responding to me the next day. And part of my job, which was very enticing to me, especially where I
was in my life and my brain space, was I had to spend a week in Ireland every two months. So I spent a lot of time in the office and out of the office
with these colleagues. And I really got a sense of what they prioritized and what they didn't.
And salaries there were not very high. Nobody had a lot of money, but there was a lot of support
for them. There was a real safety net for them by their government. So that's one thing.
But just a de-emphasis of work. It was not how they measured a successful life.
And I remember sitting with them and really just enjoying my time there, number one,
but really enjoying being able to slow down and knowing that even if I had a list of 10 problems that we needed
to fix right this minute, nobody was going to fix them. So I just had to ride it out.
That was a real learning experience. Yeah. I mean, it's just, it's a cultural shift that
makes you really think about things differently. And like circling all the way back to the beginning
of our conversation where I feel like ambition isn't necessarily gone. And some people still have the same old ambition for the same
definition of success and they're hard charging and they're like, like doing that exact same
thing. But I feel like increasingly we're just ambitious for different things. Yes. We're
ambitious for love, for peace, for peace of mind, to be able to exhale, to be able to spend time with people
we can't get enough of. And we're elevating that to the level of this actually matters as much,
if not more. You were asking the question, what's in service of what?
Yes. Yes. I am ambitious to feel content. I don't expect happiness every day, but I am ambitious to feel a sense of equanimity in my
life. You can't find when your life is out of balance. And I am ambitious to invest in friendship,
which is something I've really lacked for the majority of my life and is so important,
especially as you get older, right? And just being a good person. How do I show up every day?
Those are things you need space and time to think about. We don't just come out being good people
who know how to manage ourselves in the world. And many of our childhoods don't help with that,
right? So it takes work and it takes effort. And that's something to be ambitious for.
Being a person who means something in other people's lives,
all of those things, that's how I calculate if I'm a success now.
It feels like a good place for us to come full circle as well.
So I'll ask you the question I always ask at the end of these conversations,
which is in this container of the Good Life Project.
If I offer up the phrase to live a good life, what comes up?
I want when I die for people to say she was a really good person.
That's a good life.
Thank you.
Hey, before you leave, if you love this episode, say that you'll also love the conversation we had with Jen Sincero about transforming your life. You'll find a link to that episode in the show notes.
This episode of Good Life Project was produced by executive producers, Lindsay Fox and me, Jonathan Fields. Editing help by Alejandro Ramirez, Christopher Carter crafted our theme music and special thanks to Shelly Adele for her research on this episode. And of course, if you haven't already done so, please go ahead and follow Good Life Project in
your favorite listening app. And if you found this conversation interesting or inspiring or valuable,
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Just copy the link from the app you're using
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Tell them to listen.
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because when podcasts become conversations and conversations become action, that's how we all come alive together. Until
next time, I'm Jonathan Fields, signing off for Good Life Project. Mayday, mayday.
We've been compromised.
The pilot's a hitman.
I knew you were going to be fun.
January 24th.
Tell me how to fly this thing.
Mark Wahlberg.
You know what the difference between me and you is?
You're gonna die.
Don't shoot him! We need him!
Y'all need a pilot?
Flight Risk.
The Apple Watch Series 10 is here.
It has the biggest display ever.
It's also the thinnest Apple Watch ever,
making it even more comfortable on your wrist,
whether you're running, swimming, or sleeping. And it's the fastest-charest Apple Watch ever, making it even more comfortable on your wrist, whether you're running, swimming,
or sleeping. And it's the fastest
charging Apple Watch, getting you
8 hours of charge in just 15 minutes.
The Apple Watch Series X.
Available for the first time in
glossy jet black aluminum.
Compared to previous generations, iPhone XS
are later required. Charge time and actual
results will vary.