I recently embarked on a large programming
project that became the most frustrating, stressful
thing I’ve done since I’ve been in business.
I won’t bore you with the details, but suffice it
to say that everything that could go wrong, did go
wrong.
With the deadline looming at the height of the
crisis, I needed to call my scripting guru for a
solution- and I needed to do it quick!
Right at that moment, my 5-year-old decided that
she was going to self-destruct if she didn’t have my
immediate attention.
Now, mind you my
daughter is not the quietly persistent
tug-on-your-sleeve kind of attention-getter. No.
She’s more of a
the-louder-I-am-the-faster-she’ll-hear-me kind of a
gal.
As I approached the limits of my patience (and
she hers), I had to decide whether to make my
deadline or to spend some time with her.
I found myself thinking, "Why don’t I work in an
office, like normal people do?" "Why do I do this?"
The thing is, I really wanted to play with my
daughter. I mean, wouldn’t you?
But...the fact remained that I had a job to do.
These are the moments that make me think it would
be so much easier to go back to a "normal job".
Working for someone else, you do your job and then
you go home. When your workday ends, it ends. You’re
not tempted to get up in the middle of the night and
drive to your office so that you can do that one
thing you forgot to do. When your office is just
down the hall, it’s just too easy to do that.
I’m quite sure that I’m not the only home-based
business owner who has asked themselves this
question, "Why do I do this?"
It’s not easy to stay motivated when chances are
you’re working longer hours for less pay (or no
pay!) than your "job".
And throw in the
challenge of trying to be a professional while your
children are arguing over who’s turn it is to use
the self-inflating whoopee cushion right outside
your office door and well, it’s a miracle we don’t
all just give up and lease office space.
So, why do I do this? I think most of all, it’s
because I get to decide whether to call a client, or
play with my daughters.
Sometimes I just need to be reminded, and it’s
almost always my children who do.