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.

If our assumptions don’t match, we can clash with best intentions
Looking for the Boston scapegoat? You’ll never find perfect security
Does your life feel wasted so far? Maybe your best is yet to come
Those Libyan ‘freedom fighters’ we paid for? They’re murdering thugs
Knowing right choice years later is useless without time machine
I need to communicate meaning, but my words vanish into a void
Little girl’s happy ending reminds us not to be defined by tragedy
What evil lives in the heart of man who can kill his wife, kids?
Putin’s Russia: Friends, enemies or just another basket case state?