Opportunities Will Come
Be Open and Opportunities Will Come
I like to talk about intentionality. It was always my intention to be successful whether career wise or financially. So I built a future and skill set based on this idea. I have to admit, however, that some of my greatest adventures have seemed to appear out of thin air. Some would call this luck. I like to frame this concept differently. In the process of being open, I believe, opportunities will come.
The term pivot is often used to describe this phenomenon. The ability to embrace new input, and create new pathways has always served me well. Thus I was usually ready to receive whatever karma had to throw at me.
And generally it has worked out nicely.
Nursing Home Work
I built a huge part of my career on the day to day care of nursing home patients. Although such an integral part of both my occupational path and economic security, I had no intention of seeing patients in this setting.
I was quietly chugging along in my office outpatient practice when I got a call, out of the blue, from the administrator of a local nursing home. She had recently fired the medical director of the facility and was wondering if I wanted to give it a try.
I said yes. I had nothing to lose, and a world of experience and knowledge to gain. That simple phone call has lead to a wonderful career working in facilities taking care of some of the sickest and most in need patients. I not only learned a great deal, but it also became one of my best lazy side hustles.
Opportunities will come at the most unlikely times. By being open to this new experience, I was thrust into a durable career path that has served me well over the years.
Hospice
I always had an affinity for caring for the critically ill and dying. I started volunteering for hospice as a medical student. As my career progressed, however, my official affiliation disappeared. Sure I took care of people at the end of life as the primary physician, but I was never formally linked.
Until an interaction I had with the care of a nursing home patient. Hospice was consulted, and the medical director was impressed with my knowledge of end of life care and my familiarity with pain medicines.
She suggested that I consider doing contract work with her company. I was incredibly busy with a bustling office practice, but I couldn’t turn down this unique opportunity to not only uncorrelate revenue streams (get paid hourly as a contractor instead of directly for patient services), but also learn a ton.
I leapt before I looked. It has been one of my best decisions ever. As I settle into my half retirement, hospice work is playing a big role in building a life more based on purpose and identity.
Opportunities will come, will you be open to them?
Financial Independence
I always knew that I was interested in personal finance, but had none of the vocabulary or even knowledge to understand what that looked like. I had been writing on the internet for years about medicine when I got an unexpected call from Jim Dahle. He wanted me to write a review for his personal finance book for doctors, The White Coat Investor.
I could have said no. I could have closed myself off to this time consuming project. Opportunities will come and you have to be willing to jump on them.
After reading his book in one sitting, I knew my life had been upended. A few years later, I am writing my own personal finance blog and hosting a podcast about next level financial independence conversations.
Who would have known?
Final Thoughts
If you learn to be open, opportunities will come. This means saying yes when a stranger comes asking. You can always back out later if the venture doesn’t suit you. Some call this pivoting. Some call it luck.
I think of it as not letting fear get in the way of personal growth.
Well said
Thanks Bill!
Absolutely agree ! Your path is a great example of doing what you love and the openness you possess to allow opportunities to find you . Of course, saying Yes , is a big part too. Inspiringly!
It’s the difference between mindset and skill set. I’ll discuss more on tomorrows post.
I call it “time travel” and all time travel is future oriented and dynamic. In your case you didn’t recognize opportunity opportunity recognized you. I trained as a cardiac anesthesiologist. In the navy they needed someone to run the ICU and do general routine anesthesia. They asked me if I knew anything about pain management and I knew something so suddenly I was a pain doctor to boot. All 4 service branches were sending me patients, flying them into see me, so I got out knowing a lot about pain. NEVER VOLUNTEER! When I settled down after locums, I opened a pain practice as a 10 hour a week side gig that nearly doubled my income. Never did another heart.
Never volunteer, but also don’t be afraid to say yes to new opportunities.
Very true Doc. I started throwing my graphic arts out there on websites to sell, and next thing you know I have people asking me to do custom logo designs. Opportunities will come indeed!
A perfect benefit of our half retirements. We can sit back and let the opportunities come as they may.
It is amazing how some of the biggest financial boons sneak up on us when we least expect it. Of course, opening the door when opportunity knocks is a big part of it too. You know as well as I do that once you start looking for side hustles you start seeing them everywhere. I imagine one of your biggest challenges in half retirement is putting the blinders up and resisting the urge to answer the next knock at the door.
I only now accept opportunities that lead to knowledge and experiance. The money I don’t worry about as much.
“Some would call this luck.” That reminds me of something that one of my old coaches used to always say – “Luck is when preparation meets opportunity.”
It’s important to keep learning, honing skill sets, obtaining experience or credentials. If you do a good job, are reliable, and play well with others, the opportunities will come.
As you point out, it’s important to be open to those opportunities and recognize them when they come along. Most of us won’t complete our careers in the same way that we assumed we would at the end of medical school or even at the end of residency.
There are a bunch of new beginnings and new endings if you look for them.