6 Keys to Getting Paid for Being You: An Anti-Career Guide

Posted on 24 Mar, 2008

27 Comments so far »

  1. jeff@MySuperChargedLife said,

    Wrote on March 24, 2008 @ 6:04 pm

    I loved “The Matrix”! It was an awesome movie that was very thought-provoking. Nice article!

  2. Kelly@ SHE-POWER said,

    Wrote on March 24, 2008 @ 6:51 pm

    Clay

    This is a really inspirational article and it has a depth and a uniqueness that can only come when someone writes from their heart. I really needed to read this today so thanks for sharing.

    I love Kimya’s song too. I’ve never heard of her, but I recognise her voice from Juno. Such a beautiful movie. And I think she’s a very lucky woman to have a mother who encouraged her to be true to herself and find her answers within.

    Most of our parents love us so much their fear kicks in when we are choosing our future. They push us in directions they think will be “good” for us. The important thing to remember is WE always know what’s good for us.

    Abraham-Hicks says the secret to gettign what you want in life is “Follow your bliss”, and I try to remind myself of that every time I start swamping myself with outside obligations.

    Cheers
    Kelly

  3. Charlie Gilkey said,

    Wrote on March 24, 2008 @ 7:02 pm

    Great post, Clay. Too often we try to flourish by being something we’re not and instead whither in the shell we don’t fit into. Too many of us also confuse being good at something with that something being good for us to do.

    The sad thing is how scared people become when they cut off the unimportant because they don’t know what to fill it back up with. Societies focused on the outside have forgotten to teach us how to retreat to ourselves.

    Keep up the great work! Good job on scoring the guest post on Write to Done, as well!

  4. Nez said,

    Wrote on March 24, 2008 @ 7:31 pm

    Hi Clay,

    I’m realizing #6: Making Time right now myself.

    I’m self-employed, so I suppose I’ve accomplished a few of the other keys.

    At the same time, a lot of my time and energy goes into running my business, but recently I realized I need to devote time and energy into my family, and even for myself as well.

    Recently, I’ve even started reading more again, usually an 30-60 minutes in bed until I’m sleepy.

    Thanks for the reminders.

  5. JEMi @ InMyHeels said,

    Wrote on March 24, 2008 @ 7:45 pm

    See, now that’s pretty awesome. I ALWAYS thought I should be paid for being JEMi :-P :)

    lol

    Clay, this is an inspirational piece, very worthy of the stumble thumb. You make a lot of great points - my favorite being tip 1 - realize your potential. When I came alive, a few of my personal talents kind of screamed at me. Always been there but never really actualized or cultivated because I am unbelievably talented at downplaying the things I can do to others and to myself.

    And you’re right - it’s “easier” to quit everything and go back to school than trying a new idea that you know just might be crazy enough to work. It’s that risk factor- that fear. That’s one of the big examples of trusting yourself and your instinct - which is hard to do when you haven’t honestly experienced your true sense of self yet.

    Ok I lied - I love tip 4 as well.
    Ditto - great work Clay :) as expected of course!

  6. Hunter Nuttall said,

    Wrote on March 24, 2008 @ 8:31 pm

    Cool song! Did you catch the Super Mario Brothers reference? How do you embed music clips like that?

    And of course, great post as usual. Getting paid for being me is exactly what I’m trying to do!

  7. Naomi Dunford said,

    Wrote on March 24, 2008 @ 8:53 pm

    Clay, I’ve read everything on your blog and loved it. This, however, is the best. Awesome stuff. If I could Stumble it twice, I would.

  8. J.D. Meier said,

    Wrote on March 25, 2008 @ 1:16 am

    I think the two worst mistakes are:
    1. chasing a strength that’s not a passion
    2. focusing on your weaknesses over strengths

    I think the proven practices are:
    1. play to your passion
    2. know your strengths
    3. reduce your liabilities

    The strength trap is easy to fall into. The trap is you get rewarded for your strength, so you keep doing it, even though you don’t enjoy it. The fix is turn your passions into strengths.

    I think the most insightful book I read on finding your strengths is Now Discover Your Strengths. It’s a unique catalog of strengths that gives you a new lens on your capabilities.

  9. Clay Collins said,

    Wrote on March 25, 2008 @ 2:13 am

    @J.D.: I really agree with you about the “chasing a strength that’s not a passion.” Sometimes our abilities can be curses :-). We’re rewarded for them, and when we’re not grounded enough to realize that the praise isn’t worth the sacrifice, we just keep on keeping on for all the wrong reasons.

  10. Clay Collins said,

    Wrote on March 25, 2008 @ 2:16 am

    @Hunter: Yea, that Mario Bros. reference is great. Something about jumping in the pipe and going straight to level 8 I think? Are you coming out as a former geek :-)?

  11. Clay Collins said,

    Wrote on March 25, 2008 @ 2:23 am

    @JEMi: Yeah, you would except to be paid for being JEMi :-). And you should, too, Ms. Bada$$.

    @ Nez: Yeah, working from home is great because you save on commutes, food, and MEETINGS. I’ll email you offline about your new business.

    @ Charlie: “Too many of us also confuse being good at something with that something being good for us to do.” Very true. Or we might really be passionate about the things we’re good at and an employer or school or whatever bastardizes it, transforming the task by making it repetitive or otherwise stripping out the creative components, which is unfortunate.

  12. Clay Collins said,

    Wrote on March 25, 2008 @ 2:27 am

    @Kelly: I like that “follow your bliss” quotation. Truly. When you’ve found your bliss the unimportant seems so much less relevant and motivation for the mundane obligatorily melts away at a scary pace. Frightening but good sometimes.

  13. Paul Montwill | Sharingmatters.com said,

    Wrote on March 25, 2008 @ 5:01 am

    Clay, you just pointed out how to avoid frustration. People to often start from high goals instead of concentrating on themselves first. Today’s world is very demanding and suggests we should do things that are not OUR things. It is worth being aware of this toxic influence.

  14. Hunter Nuttall said,

    Wrote on March 25, 2008 @ 8:30 am

    Clay, I think the geeks are the ones who DIDN’T play Super Mario Bros!

  15. Evelyn said,

    Wrote on March 25, 2008 @ 9:14 am

    “These 6 keys may or may not lead to millionaire or multi-millionaire status. They will, however, bring you to actualize the value inherent in your own unique abilities and passions, and this value will be more than worthy of remuneration.”

    Your conclusion above is so right!!! Love your post! Stumbled and Dugg!

    With much thanks and appreciation,
    Evelyn

  16. Michael Moniz said,

    Wrote on March 26, 2008 @ 12:33 am

    I agree! People are so quick to quit their jobs for college which is only a promise of a better future, not a guarantee. Why can’t you do the same for your own business? It is exactly the same! You get whatever you get from the time you put into it and the commitment you make.

  17. Amanda Linehan said,

    Wrote on March 26, 2008 @ 3:09 pm

    Clay, this is a really important post. I think many people feel like they don’t have a passion or any kind of unique purpose in this world and that’s why they chase things outside of themselves. Knowing what that passion is a huge, difficult first step.

  18. Clay Collins said,

    Wrote on March 27, 2008 @ 1:55 am

    @Amanda: I agree. I think finding your passion requires a lot of stress free playful time, and it takes a lot of sacrifice to create that for yourself. The trouble is that lots of people don’t have faith that if they created the free time they wouldn’t end up being lazy and poor. So faith is huge :-).

  19. MonkMojo said,

    Wrote on March 30, 2008 @ 10:36 pm

    Some may enjoy the webcomic I made for this article.

    http://mojo1000.com/1000cuts/following-your-passion.html

  20. Clay Collins said,

    Wrote on March 30, 2008 @ 10:49 pm

    @MonkMojo: Love the webcomic! Your “silly-putty and jelly sandwich for the soul” blog is also pretty fantastic. Quite the mashup.

  21. Clay Collins said,

    Wrote on March 30, 2008 @ 10:55 pm

    @ Hunter: I used the audio player plugin. Love it!

  22. Damon L. said,

    Wrote on April 2, 2008 @ 9:37 am

    Clay, your writing comes off as someone who has had a lot if real life experience, but what I think is that you’ve not only been given an incredible gift of insight, you’ve also given your own time to cultivate it and think deeply about these subjects. If we could all take a tip from you and simply slow down and not fill every waking moment with distractions…

    Like Alanna Morisett (sp?) sings in her song You Oughtta Know: “here, can ya handle this…” (long 2-3 seconds of silence) “did you think about your bills, your ex, your deadlines, or when you think your gonna die, or did you long for the next distraction?”

    At least I think that’s the song title.

    Great blog.

  23. Clay Collins said,

    Wrote on April 14, 2008 @ 11:58 pm

    @Damon: I’m truly touched by these very kind words. Thank you.

  24. bart said,

    Wrote on April 25, 2008 @ 12:18 am

    there are restriction to what you will get paid eventually depending on your educational history. But if you have potential and act as yourself, you will get paid better because people just like you better. That’s my experience..

  25. George E said,

    Wrote on May 3, 2008 @ 5:28 am

    Hi,
    Unfortunately, my parents all they wanted was to go to college, get a degree and a good job. And I think most parents do this mistake.
    I agree that if you do what you love you will eventually be paid better. But as you said it’s very difficult to find your true passion, especially when you have a good paying job. And if you are not good at what you love?
    As another reader said “The trap is you get rewarded for your strength, so you keep doing it, even though you don’t enjoy it. The fix is turn your passions into strengths.” Maybe he is right

  26. Derek Ralston said,

    Wrote on July 19, 2008 @ 2:00 am

    Clay,

    Great post- I agree that “society scripted routes to success are failing us”… Unfortunately, many people stay too busy to really even find out what makes them come alive. And when they do take time to reflect, they often don’t take action. And when they do take action, they often stop at the first sign of failure. So there are lots of obstacles on the way, and that’s why it’s so important to do what you love- because if you aren’t doing that, chances are you’ll get stuck at one of those obstacles before you see results/”get paid for being you”.

    I’ve really been enjoying reading through your blog archives- your posts are consistently well-written and insightful. Keep it up!

  27. Jake @ Silver Coins said,

    Wrote on July 25, 2008 @ 3:38 am

    i think the trick is to present yourself in a way that people recognize has value and to charge accordingly.

Comment RSS · TrackBack URI

Leave a Comment

Name: (Required)

E-mail: (Required)

Website:

Comment: