Finding work you love

Evan Mehlenbacher

by Evan Mehlenbacher

It’s a question many high school and college graduates are asking right now: what do I do with the rest of my life?”

Dan Amos, CEO of Aflac, a large insurance company, was quoted in USA Today as recommending to graduates looking for a career, “I tell graduates to find their treasure. By treasure, I’m not talking about money or material possessions. I’m talking about something in life that they’re passionate about and pursue it. That’s the key to true happiness” (5/21/07).

I can relate to the spirit of Amos’ comment because I took a job after graduating from college that I didn’t love. It paid the bills, and I figured that was enough. But my compromise was a mistake that I had to correct later.

As I learned from experience, there are jobs that keep us occupied and pay the bills, but can lead to great boredom and lack of fulfillment. Then there are jobs that not only keep us occupied and pay the bills, but they also have genuine meaning and purpose for us. In them, we love what we do! And these are the best jobs to have.

For five years after my college graduation, I farmed with my dad. We got along fine, but my heart was not into agriculture. There were happy times, to be sure, but for the most part, days for me were long and mundane. I finally admitted that I was staying in the family business for the money, and it was not making me happy. I needed a spiritual reason to get up each day.

Mary Baker Eddy wrote, “Mortals suppose that they can live without goodness, when God is good and the only real Life.” As I gradually figured out, the goodness of God is the love of God felt and lived. To stay in a career for the money was leaving my spiritual cravings for love-inspired work unfed. I needed to feel more love everyday in the workplace. I was sacrificing my spiritual needs for financial gain, and the effect left me feeling spiritually starved.

Finally, in the spirit of “…God is good and the only real Life,” I realized that anything truly good in my life was not going to come from a paycheck, but from living true to God, to my real Life. This meant I needed to be honest with myself about what work had genuine meaning and purpose for me, and not deceive myself into believing that earning a wage was enough.

My “treasure” was not money, but in helping and healing others spiritually. And in my case, to do that, I needed to leave the family operation. I needed to give myself the time and space to pursue work that inspired true love in my heart.

Knowing that God would prosper a right idea, I acted on this inspiration. I quit the farm and committed myself to the full-time practice of Christian Science. It was one of the wisest decisions I’ve ever made in my life. I have been one very happy worker ever since. I had finally found enough courage to follow the wise maxim, “Do what you love,” and trust God to be there to support me. And God always has been there for me without fail.

Yes, there were times when the bank account got pretty low, but I’ve always had enough. And over time, I prospered in my work, until earning an adequate income was no longer a concern.

“Do what you love,” is not a blind wistful statement made by older people. It’s born out of the wisdom of experience by countless workers who have learned the hard way, that life without love is a life without meaning.

None of us should have to accept a job of drudgery and boredom as inevitable or unavoidable. We may take a less than ideal job in the short term while we listen to divine Mind for the long term plan, but it’s helpful to remember that God has given each of us a happy, productive, love-filled life to live, and we can live it.

Life is good. Life is God, and Life is Love. Life, Love, and God, all work together in one seamless whole.

Each of us can be assured that we have a deeply significant and spiritually satisfying life to live, direct from God that is ours to claim. I’m writing this blog from experience. Don’t settle for anything less, at least for the long run anyway!