Dream Job? It's a Trap...
It's not you. It's the system đ
TL;DR: Iâve spent months telling two young women to quit their jobs and chase their dreams. Turns out, I was wrong. After transitioning from C-suite leadership to a different role, Iâm realizing that maybe the steady job that funds your actual life IS the dream. And maybe it shouldnât take decades to figure that out.
Hello there đ
Iâve spent a good number of hours encouraging two young womenâ29 and 31âto quit their jobs and pursue their passions. Theyâre both trapped in careers they hate, dreaming of something else. One has no kids. One has a small child and another on the way. Neither is the sole earner in their household.
My advice? Get out. Lifeâs too short. Follow your dreams.
Hereâs the thing: Maybe I was wrong.
I arrived at this realization through my own journey. After twenty years of being either #1 or #2 in leadership, Iâm in a very different role now. And itâs been a real adjustmentânot being the big boss, not carrying the weight of the organization on my shoulders, not having that corner-office authority.
But as we make the turn into fall, with a big birthday looming in 2026, Iâm working on giving myself grace. Recognizing what this shift has given me. The privilege of work that supports educators. The ability to clock out and actually have energy left. And most importantlyâthe space to have a life outside of work.
Because hereâs what I do now: I lie around and watch K-dramas. I started my own newsletter (if youâre reading this, thank you đ«¶). I randomly make batches of chocolate chip cookies and eat them right off the rack. I exercise every day. I have a regular Thursday night friend date. I hang with my kids. I text with my besties. I read so many books. I work on my Threads account and my digital products. I travel when I can.
Yes, I donât have the kind of income I used to. I donât wear (or buy) beautiful clothes and shoes anymore. But I have something I didnât have when I was climbing: actual life.
So whatâs success if not that?
When I feel bad about not having the big title anymore, what am I actually feeling bad about? Itâs all ego. For real. Iâm buying into the capitalist, patriarchal system thatâs so ingrained in me that I canât even see it most days.
So thatâs when I realized: maybe those two young women arenât trapped. Maybe theyâre actually ahead of me. Because theyâre asking these questions at 29 and 31, not 59.

The Problem Pattern: The Passion Trap
Hereâs the narrative weâve all swallowed: If youâre not passionate about your work, youâre wasting your life. Your job should fuel your soul. Your career should be your calling. If youâre just working for a paycheck, youâre settling.
This is particularly vicious for women because weâre already supposed to be passionate about everythingâmotherhood, relationships, our appearance, our homes. Now work, too? Weâre supposed to find deep meaning and purpose in our jobs while also being grateful for the opportunity and never complaining about the grind?
So women stay in jobs that drain them because they âshouldâ be passionate about them. Or they quit stable positions to chase dreams in an insecure world, then blame themselves when the passion doesnât pay the rent. Or they feel guilty about having a âregularâ job because itâs not their calling.
Meanwhile, the steady job with good benefits that lets you clock out at at a decent hour and actually live your life? Thatâs treated like failure. Like youâre not ambitious enough. Like youâre not living up to your potential.
Weâve been told that following your passion is brave and staying for security is cowardly. But hereâs the inner voice of reality: Itâs really hard to follow your passions when youâre worried about rent, healthcare, and whether you can take a sick day without financial panic.
You know what actually enables passion? Security. Stability. A job that might not fuel your soul but fuels your bank account, your ability to experiment with that side project, your freedom to spend weekends doing what you actually love instead of hustling to make ends meet.
How Most People Try to Solve It (and Why It Fails)
The standard advice keeps feeding us the same toxic narratives:
âQuit your job and bet on yourself!â This sounds empowering until you realize itâs just hustle culture wrapped in an inspirational quote. It ignores that most people need health insurance, steady income, and the ability to sleep at night without financial terror. It treats security as weakness instead of strategy.
âFind your passion and monetize it!â Translation: nothing in your life gets to just be enjoyableâeverything must be optimized, leveraged, turned into a personal brand. Your hobby becomes your side hustle becomes your second job. God forbid you just like doing something without it generating income.
âYouâre just afraid of taking risks!â This oneâs especially cruel because it pathologizes reasonable caution as fear. No, Karen, Iâm not afraid of riskâIâm aware that I need to eat and have a place to live. Thereâs a difference between being brave and being reckless, and acting like security is for cowards is gaslighting.
âLean in and create the career you want!â Sure, just individually overcome systemic barriers while also being passionate, strategic, grateful, and never complaining. Easy peasy đ
Hereâs why all this advice fails: It assumes passion and work should be the same thing. It never questions whether the job is supposed to be the center of your life or just the thing that funds your actual life.
It also puts all the burden on individual women to fix whatâs fundamentally a systemic problem. The issue isnât that youâre not striving enoughâitâs that weâve built an economy where people canât afford to live unless theyâre constantly grinding, and then weâve convinced them that if theyâre not also passionate about the grind, theyâre doing it wrong.
The Solution: Try a Work to Live Mindset
Hereâs the reframe Iâm working with: Donât conflate the job with the dream.
Success isnât about climbing as high as I can. Itâs about building the life I actually want. And sometimesâoftenâthat means the work is just work. The thing that pays for everything else that matters.
This requires completely flipping the script, both in how we talk to ourselves and how we respond to the world:
Instead of: âI should quit and follow my passion.â
Try: âMy steady job is what makes it possible for me to explore my passions without panic.â
Instead of: (When someone asks about your career ambitions) âOh, Iâm just doing this regular job, nothing exciting.â
Try: âIâm in a role that gives me the stability and time to focus on what actually matters to me.â
Instead of: âIâm not living up to my potential by staying here.â
Try: âIâm being strategic about how I use my finite time and energy.â
Instead of: (Internal guilt spiral) âI should be doing more with my career.â
Try: âMy career is doing exactly what I need it to doâfunding my actual life.â
Instead of: (When feeling envious of someoneâs âpassion careerâ) âTheyâre so successful, and Iâm not.â
Try: âThey made one choice. I made a different one. Both are valid.â
The mindset shift is profound: Youâre not giving up on your dreams by having a regular job. Youâre making your dreams possible.
That job youâre ambivalent about? It might be giving you health insurance to manage your needs. Financial stability to save for what you really want. Mental bandwidth to write on weekends. Time to actually be present with your kids. Freedom from the constant anxiety of making your passion profitable.
This isnât settling. This is wisdom.
And listenâif you genuinely want to quit everything and chase the dream career, DO IT. Just make sure youâre doing it because you want it, not because youâve internalized the message that youâre not enough if you donât.
Power Practice for the Week đȘđœ
Make a two-column list:
Left side: âWhat my job gives meâ
Right side: âWhat I do with what my job gives meâ
Be specific. Your job gives you $X salaryâwhat does that make possible? It gives you health insuranceâwhat does that protect? It gives you nights and weekendsâwhat do you do with that time?
Then look at the right column and ask yourself: Is this my life? Because if it is, maybe your job is doing exactly what itâs supposed to do.
The Short of It đ«
Weâve bought into the idea that we must always be striving for a bigger title and salary. For some, that IS what fuels them. For others, itâs either what drains us or isnât attainable. And then we feel bad about ourselves. Thatâs the system at work.
What our jobs actually need to give us: a paycheck, health insurance, a secure landing spot. The stability to fuel ourselves. This isnât settling. This is living.
If youâre not at the place you thought you should be by now, stop beating yourself up. Itâs not you. Itâs the system making you feel less than. And that is total đ bullshit đ .
With you all the way,
- Kara
P.S. Next week: A deep dive into the importance of a work bestie. The system keeps us second-guessing ourselves. Your work bestie keeps it real.
Got a great work bestie story? Reply and share it with me! Iâll include it in next weekâs newsletter (if you want!)

