by Chris McGinty of AccordingToWhim.com |
It’s a light app that I simply
find amusing. It has a Mature 17+ rating just because the submissions range a
lot of subjects.
I recently downloaded the app again,
because in recent times I’ve been looking for a variety of things to write
about for the blog and other projects. This app can easily be used for writing
prompts by simply using the first question that comes up or picking the first
question that you feel you’d like to write about. A word count is optional, but
I’m also attempting to write shorter blog posts from time to time, so I might
not impose a word limit. By the way, this isn’t a shorter blog post... well,
maybe for me.
I thought I would tell a story
about hanging out with Nathan one day after randomly putting a lot of crap from
his house out in his front yard. It was a yard sale. Otherwise, such behaviour
might be a bit strange.
When the early morning crowds
started to die down, I opened “What if...” and we started discussing some of
the questions. Among some interesting questions, some lame questions, some
shrugs disguised as questions, and a few that made no sense at all, the
following question (which I’m paraphrasing) made for a very interesting
discussion:
What if... you had a yard sale -but- you had to actually sell your yard? |
What if...
you could work your dream job
but...
you could never make more than
$20,000 a year.
The phrasing was the interesting
part of the question. It suggested that you couldn’t even take on a part time
job to make more than $20,000 (already close to the US poverty line) and that
if inflation made $20,000 a year even less livable, you’d still be stuck there
if you wanted to keep your dream job.
For Nathan, this was a complete no
go. He makes significantly more than $20,000, and he couldn’t see cutting the
lifestyle of his family to work a dream job. He said, “I like my current job
well enough.”
I only make about $24,000 a year,
so I had a different take on the income limitation. I realized that it would
put me in a position of having roommates or living with a significant other for
the rest of my life, but it was only $4,000 less a year to work a job that I love.
Sign me up. I’d risk inflation causing $20,000 to be worth closer to $5,000 ten
years from now to not hate going to work.
For being a somewhat silly app,
we were put in a position to consider some interesting points about priorities.
For Nathan, the priority was his home life. For me, it was my career. Maybe it’s
simply that I’ve spent so much of my life at work that I feel that my life
would be more rewarding if my work was more rewarding.
I think on some level that both
Nathan and I have pursued building a business from the perspective of replacing
our income, but I think that our reasons may be different. It’s possible that
Nathan would simply want more time at home. I think I would want to work more,
because even if the dream job wasn’t making me much money, it would keep me fed
and sheltered. Everything else would be expendable to spend my days working in
creative environments.
I’m not saying that every
question in the app will cause such deep conversations. You’ll find yourself
discussing farting soon enough. This might even be the most interesting
question in the whole bunch, but it actually has shaped some aspects of my life
in the time since that discussion. It made me realize that soon enough I’ll be
willing to live on less money for a while in order to do work that I enjoy. And
the nice thing is that in real life, I can actually make more than $20,000 a
year.
Chris McGinty is a blogger who
wonders about the people who want more from society for working less. Would
they actually be happy? Or would they just want more and more for working less
and less if they got their wish?
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