Growing up in a poor neighborhood with my single mom needing
taking care of the family alone was not, as they say, child’s play. Drinking
and drugs and familial anarchy permeated the walls of our cockroach-infested
house. Not to mention all the baggage that comes with that lifestyle: discontent,
anxiety, uncertainty, depression.
To add insult to injury, we were broke. Like flat broke. Dead
broke. Poor as church mice. I’d have to remove my shoes to count how many times
our electricity got shut off on Doutor Osvaldo Urioste Street. I shit you not.
By the time adulthood was at my doorstep, I thought if I made enough money, I could circumvent
Mom’s path; I could somehow achieve happiness (or at least finance it). So I
spent my twenties traversing the corporate ladder.
While I was studying I found an entry-level sales job with a
corporation that “let” me work six, sometimes seven, days a week, ten to twelve
hours a day. I wasn’t great at it, but I learned how to get by—and then how to
get better.
It was when I looked all the money that I had won, but that I
didn’t have time to spend.
Was the first time that I realize that money couldn’t buy my
happiness.
However I had a dream to be happy, and unlike the young people
who have the privilege to devote to studies, I needed work. Was when I got a
job in a office that made me truly happy and although I was eaning only 1.300
dolares,per year I felt the most happy person of the world.
I bought TV, a surround-sound system, and a stack of DVD.
By 20 I was making over $3.500,000 a year, twice as much as I’d
ever seen Mom bring home, but I was spending even more, racking up the
credit-card debt. I obviously needed the three M’s in my life: Make. More.
Money.
So I worked harder, much harder, and after a series of promotions—store
manager at 22, regional manager at 24—I was, at age 27, the youngest director
in the company’s 140-year history. I’d become a fast-track career woman, a
personage of sorts. Which meant that if I worked really hard, and if everything
happened exactly like it was supposed to, then I could be a vice president by
32, a senior vice president by 35 or 40, and a C-level executive—CFO, COO,
CEO—by 45 or 50, followed of course by the golden parachute. I’d have it made
then! I’d just have to be miserable for a few more years, to drudge through the
corporate politics and bureaucracy that I knew so well. Just keep climbing and
don’t look down.
And so I didn’t look down; I looked up. Leaving the dream of
singing that only I knew I had to back
And what I saw was terrifying…
“You shouldn’t ask a man who earns $20,000 a year how to make a
hundred grand,” a successful businessman once told me. Perhaps this
apothegm holds true for discontented men and happiness, as well. All these guys
I emulated—the men I most wanted to be like, the VPs and executives—were not
happy. In fact, they were miserable.
Don’t get me wrong, they weren’t bad people, but their careers
had changed them, altered them physically and emotionally: they’d explode with
anger over insignificant inconveniences; they’d scowl with furrowed brows and
complain constantly as if the world was conspiring against them, or they’d
feign sham optimism which fooled no one; they were on their second or third or
fourth(!) marriages; and they almost all seemed lonely, utterly alone in a sea
of yes-men and -women. Don’t even get me started on their health issues.
I’m talking serious health issues: obesity, gout, cancer, heart
attacks, high blood pressure, you name it. These guys were plagued with every
ailment associated with stress and anxiety. Some even wore it as a kind of
morbid badge of honor, as if it was noble or courageous or something. A
coworker, a good friend of mine on a similar trajectory, had his first heart
attack when I was 28. He had just turned 30.
But I was going to be the exception, right?
Really? What makes me so different? Simply saying I was
different didn’t make me different. Everyone says they’re different,
says they’ll do things differently, says things’ll be different when I’m in charge,
just need to sacrifice a few more weeks/months/years until I make it there. But
then we get there, wherever there may be, and then what? We don’t work
less. If anything, we work more. More hours, more demand, more responsibility.
We are dogs thrashing in the collars of our own obligations.
On call like doctors, fumbling through emails and texts and
phone calls on the go, tethered to our technology. But unlike doctors, we’re
not saving anyone. Hell, we can’t even save ourselves.
You see, money didn’t grant these men happiness; money didn’t
bring them a sense of security. The pursuit of money—the blind quest for more—crippled
them, transmogrified them, actually made them less secure.
I knew guys who earned half a million a year but who were such a financial mess
that they couldn’t get a loan for a Toyota Corolla.
And all these men had one other thing in common: many moons ago,
they too thought they’d be different.
Like them, I figured once I achieved a certain level of success,
as soon as I’d “made it,” I’d no longer need to worry about money. But
the truth is that, back on Doutor Osvaldo Urioste Street, it wasn’t the lack of
money that made us poor. No, Mom and I were poor because of poor decisions.
Repeated poor decisions.
These days I earn far fewer greenbacks, but my decisions are
better, because make me happy. Last year, as a waitress, I brought home less
money than my 19-year-old commission-check-earning self—way less
actually. But I also paid off debt, traveled the country, felt more secure.
Most importantly, I didn’t worry about money.
So I guess this is what it feels like to no longer worry about
money—a feeling I didn’t need to earn a pile of cash to feel. It turns out
that repeated good decisions—not money—allow us to let go of the worry that plagues
us. Once I let go of the worry, I had nothing to worry about.
Because
the happiness to me doesn’t have a price.
.
0 comments:
Post a Comment