Moving Towards Life Work Balance

Moving Towards Life Work balance

Moving Towards Life Work balance

I like work.  I really do.  Although I have been talking up my  half retirement, there is a reason I am not going the full monty.  I derive pleasure from being a physician.  The ability to reach out and help other human beings, and get paid for it is amazing.  Not only the work itself, but the human interaction is also quite gratifying.  I look forward to years of being a hospice medical director and enjoying the potential to affect my patients lives, and have collegial relationships with my peers.  But strangely, life is starting to get in the way of work.  Even with my reduced schedule, I am finding that pursuing my passions is starting to infringe on my employment time.  Between creating content, reading, exercising, and blog promotion, I am constantly stopping in the middle of a task to hop in the car and go to the office.  While most are struggling with work life balance, I am moving towards life work balance.

With all this life going on around me, who has time for work?

Financial Independence and Priorities

I guess it is all about priorities.  Pre financial independence life always took a back seat to employment.  I was continuously making ends meet on nights and weekends to feed my W2 needs during normal business hours.  This created a harried schedule where vacations, pleasurable activities, and family time were all squished into as small a cubbyhole as possible.

It’s a truncated existence.  An existence with anxious glances at the wrist watch and regrets about premature close.  But for the most part, I didn’t really know any better.  The busy professional forgets that the luxury of unhurried time consumption is in itself a joy.

Conversely, my post FI priorities have changed.

Extending vacations.  Missing deadlines.  Coming up short.

These are all things that start to happen when you are moving towards life work balance.

Moving Towards Work Life BalanceFinancial Independence is a Lever

Financial independence is the lever that flipped the switch from work life balance to life work balance.  When I realized that I no longer had to work, I began to get in touch with my true purpose and identity.  All of the sudden, time writing the blog or going to CampFI became the landmarks that I was organizing my work schedule around.

As my need for income has diminished and my joy in communication and content creation has grown, I have started moving towards life work balance.

Unbelievable Regrets

Occasional I have now found myself regretting that I don’t have more time in my busy schedule to work.  Occasionally a new opportunity comes along and I shake my head while looking at my schedule.  i just can’t fit it in.

And herein lies the magic.  Since I find pleasure in working as a physician, I don’t think I will ever stop.  I know, however, that I have found the right balance when I start complaining about not having enough time to fit in another work related activity that I would enjoy, because I am too busy with other things.

I have a blog post to write.  A novel to finish.  A podcast to be a guest on.  Or a vacation to take.

Final thoughts

Financial independence has started the process of moving towards life work balance.  After years of believing that being a physician was my purpose and identity, I feel privileged to have found a newer better version of myself to become.  A communicator.  A content creator.  Maybe even a podcaster?  But I still enjoy being a physician from time to time.

Managing life work balance ain’t easy.

But I might just have to make a go at it.

Doc G

A doctor who discovered the FI community but still struggling with RE.

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14 Responses

  1. You’ve got this Doc G! You are gonna succeed at whatever you do. Just design the life you want to live and then chase after it.

    TPP

  2. Dr. MB says:

    DocG I am glad that you have found something that you enjoy. Medicine is a good career.

    We always approached our lives as family first then work. Unless it was on call duties, we minimized work whenever it clashed with other life pursuits.

    We started off each year and blocked as much time off as possible. Every summer, we would take at least one month off. We would block off for all extracurricular activities time as well. Work had to happen outside of those times.

    My husband is a surgeon and he started the process of giving away his operations when he was not actively on call. The older surgeons used to think he was nuts. But he did not want to miss our children’s youth so he happily gave up the income. He recognized that you could work 24/7 if you wanted to.

    My point is, we have done versions of this well before FI. You DO NOT have to wait till FI to start living life this way. Believing that life somehow miraculously improves just because of FI is a mirage.

    Decide what your true priorities are and work your life around that. Then you will be free no matter where you are on the path to FI.

  3. Gasem says:

    If you dare to be average you have no need to be superior. If you dare to be average it’s amazing how much time to “be” is freed up.

  4. E says:

    Great, clear details of your shift in perspective! That you understand both sides, the before
    And after FI and what the experience has to offer you is such fertile soil! It’s Inspiring!

  5. Xrayvsn says:

    It is amazing that after you have won the game you still don’t mind working in medicine which means it really is your calling. Not sure I am quite in that same boat as I think for me I would phase that part of my life out when I truly feel I have made it (changing goalposts) and can concentrate on stuff that is more creative that I feel holds my passion better. The pay drop will be substantial but with FI it really shouldn’t matter

  6. From now on I will make a point to flip work-life around to “life work”… love it!

  7. It’s interesting how money and our drive to earn a living directs our lives early on. Then as we get on sounder financial footing, some of us start to explore a deeper layer and purpose. Some people will never escape the identity tied to their work, but for others who take the red pill, it can be a whole new world (for better or worse). I’m glad you are finding a good life-work balance. Best of luck Doc G.

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