I’ve never taken a job because of the money. Not even once.
That came as a shock to me when I realized it the other day. The entire assumption behind the labor market is that we take increasingly difficult roles or maybe jobs that require longer hours because we make more money by taking them. So it confused me when I first realized that financial incentives have never motivated a job change for me.
I don’t mean I haven’t wanted more money when it was available. Each time I changed jobs — back when I worked full-time for others — each promotion meant more money than the last job. But did I take the promotions because they came with more money?
No. I wanted the excitement of doing something new. I wanted a new challenge. I wanted the enjoyment of moving up in the pecking order. I wanted the feeling of achieving something.
I was having fun.

Even when folks praise my work, my secret fear is I may be a fraud
‘How the Grinch Stole Christmas’
FRIDAY FUNNIES
It’s hard to shut off our internal chatterboxes to listen to silence
I used to ponder who I really am; today I just ask who I am for now
By end of Pooh movie, I wanted to stay in the Hundred-Acre Wood
We who believe life has meaning have lost war for modern culture
A muse is a crutch for an artist, but some need a crutch to walk
Fixing what’s broken inside often makes things worse until rebirth