At any given point in our lives, we usually have one dream or another... something under-girding us, a light at the end of the proverbial tunnel calling us onward and upward; reminding us not to quit, to keep pushing because that dream.. man.. if it were realised, it would make us so incredibly happy, so satisfied...
Throughout our lives then, we make choices and decisions that we believe will further us along the road towards the realisation of our dream(s).
We accept the job at the big conglomerate instead of the corner book store even though it will work us 10 times as hard for the equivalent level of job satisfaction (or indeed LESS) and the commuting costs us more time, money and plain old hassle than the 5 min stroll from the front door... all because we convince ourselves that the conglomerate renumeration or personal dev't policy (or whatever) will help us achieve our personal goals, and boy are we willing to sacrifice/take it on the chin so we can fulfill our dream(s).
Fathers are constantly criticised for missing out on junior's childhood, by working all the hours God sends in order to bring home the proverbial bacon so that they can fund Junior's football kit/piano lessons/swimming lessons/tennis lessons/what-have-you... and let's not forget junior's college fund.
Working Mothers get the stick for - simply put- 'working'. "Woman, you're missing out on junior's childhood, you should stay home and watch teletubbies with him, cos he will be permanently disadvantaged when compared to the other kids whose mummy's can not only drop them off at 8:45am but can be there waiting at the school gates in the SUV at 3:30 pm....(never mind poor daddy slaving away to pay for the SUV!!)...
Why's mummy working?
- To pay the bills (single parent/family where single incomes just won't cut it).
- To make a difference (maybe mummy is a nurse/teacher/charity worker/doctor).
- So her brain doesn't turn to mush. Mummy went to college/uni/post grad school and doesnt see the point of watching teletubbies and tweenies all day when she could be building a global empire (lol)
- All of the above/none of the above.
Obviously I am generalising big time here - but the point is, people with/without kids make sacrifices for their dreams.I know a bloke who took a job as a reviled 'head hunter' for at least a year, so he could gain exposure to a particular industry (through interviewing job candidates). After being laughed at, kicked and spat on... he became a junior on a trading floor... and from all accounts is therefore having the last laugh!
In pursuit of dreams we are prepared to work our way up from the bottom, and put up with a lotta ish... so what if your manager keeps taking credit for the reports you slaved 16 hour days away on; so what if you keep getting passed over for promotion because you're too ethnic/too white/ too aggressive (ASSERTIVE)/too passive/too female/too male/too tall/too short yada yada - one day you will show them all!
- Your private business will suddenly take off and you'll get bought out for millions!
- Your report will catch the eye of a major network and they hire you as anchorman/woman/talk show host.
- Your screen play will pass Quentin Tarantino/Guy Ritchie/Steven Spielberg/M Night Shamalayan/whoever and become the next blockbuster...
- Your demo gets heard by Jay-z and you change your name from Robin Fenty to Rihanna...
- and the guy from sales will finally realise that YOU are the love of his life not the fake chick from marketing!
We all dream... we put up with the crap, cos we've heard the success stories, and we know one day it'll be OUR turn...
"oh, I feel it coming"... "I have a dream", we give ourselves that pep talk several times a week... maybe even several times a day:
"I'm better than this",
"This is a means to an end..."
but...what if...what if it isn't?
What if the 'means' becomes the 'end'?
What if dreams don't come true?
What if 5... 10 ... 15... 20... even 25 years down the line... you're still dreaming... still getting passed over for promotion, still single (if your dream was to find that partner), still hustling, waiting for that big break... And then the conglomerate makes you redundant, and your skills are so specialised that every position you apply for turns you down because you are 'over qualified'.
And what if the network says you can't even do your own reports anymore because you look too 'dated', oh sure you can still write them but the new kid fresh from uni is the one who goes on camera...
When should we decide to pack in the pipe dream? When should we draw a line in the sand and fold those paper dreams away?
What if the whole 'follow your dreams' spiel is an opiate designed to help us take the ish? Cos if we're taking the ish, we're not rocking the boat, and if we're not rocking the boat then mr boss man sure is getting a good return out of us. We'll tow the party line and not complain (too much) cos we dont wanna lose the job that is the means to the end that is the realisation of our dreams!
And why is it that following our dreams and paying bills always seem to be in conflict?
Why should some of us be forced to choose? I mean, how are you gonna choose between two dreams you want equally? Perhaps they are part of a single end result ie goal, but you are being pressured to choose one or the other, or to prioritise them in terms of 'try achieving one, then the other'. What if you just want them both TOGETHER? lol!
Back to using mummies & daddies (generalisations again). Why should daddy have to choose between being 'ideal dad & husband' and being branded as 'daddy who cares about work/money more than his family' or 'daddy who is never home/always away on business'?
And mumsie - she can be 'super mum, always there for everybody, always keeping it together, house clean, kids clean, nose clean, always putting others first' or she can be 'frowned upon working mum who is always tired cos she works 10 hours in office, then starts the domestic shift by picking up junior and lil mo from the *shock! horror!* childminder *gasp*; still has to make sure everyone gets dinner, and lil Mo gets help with the homework before she can even begin to think about time for 'daddy' let alone herself!" Phew!
Are you one of these people with a 1st class degree, temping or working for an incompetent buffon while waiting for SOMEONE to recognise your talent!If our dreams are so inextricably linked to our happiness - shouldn't we simply do what makes us happy instead of deferring those dreams for 'someday'?
Are you one of those people who still wakes up in the morning singing"Dream On Dream Away. I feel today could be THE day!"
Or have you reached the point where you have folded the paper dream away?