I don’t really want to sell you a house. I wish I did.
You know how you sometimes admit something to yourself that you’ve been trying to hide? I had one of those moments this week — when I couldn’t even try to lie to myself.
I was waiting inside this nice $425,000 house for a potential buyer to arrive. I had arrived 15 minutes early and had the house to myself. I decided to record an impromptu video that I could use as a promotion. I started recording about half a dozen times but stopped in disgust each time.
“I don’t want to sell houses,” I suddenly said out loud. And I was glad no one was there to hear me.
For the last five or six years, I’ve felt as though my life was on hold. I felt like someone treading water. I’ve worked in real estate — because it was a convenient opportunity — but I’ve hated work every day. And it makes me long for the days when I was excited about work instead.

Why do we paint ourselves into joyless corners with no way out?
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Should a rational person question orthodox assumptions on climate?
Another ‘Atlas Shrugged’ moment: ‘Reasonable Profits Board’ proposed
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It’s easy to learn wrong lessons from watching parent’s behavior
What’s at the root of objections to real freedom? Paternalism
I can force child to obey me, but obedience comes with high cost