Thank you for the comments! I have to ask, what line of work were you in? Sale? Stock broker? Big game hunter?? No problem if it's personal and you don't want to share.
I have similar health barometric effects when too much is going on in work... or when I am stressed out. Actually, I have been so stressed from trying to figure out these choices that I haven't stayed on top of health maintenance as much as I should.
I have definitely had periods of my life that seemed really important at the time, but in retrospect was just 'past life'. I have had time periods where I worked harder than others, in order to reach a goal. But, I also don't feel like I have been terribly successful in my career. I am in R&D, and so success is often equated to commercialization. Instead, I've had a lot of high risk / high reward projects; they have all either not worked out, or were technical successes to some degree, but either not enough to hit it big, or didn't progress for business reasons. Something I am considering as a next step, is to have my mgmt give me a project that is lower risk / lower reward (without getting into details, the types of projects I've been on are rarely commercialized).
I probably need to learn to focus on trying to derive less life satisfaction from my work. Actually, I got on the FIRE path when my very first industry position (11 years ago) was such a shit show that I began to wonder if I needed to pursue this life.
Good news is that my current job is overall much better. I actually have an overall good situation, as does my wife. Logically speaking, it's probably stupid of me to consider this crazy start-up job. But then I have that nagging feeling in the back of my head, that I haven't accomplished anything significant, that I haven't done enough amazing things. That's sort of what's been motivating me. But also there are other ways to scratch the itch.
My wife does not want to move for this job. She doesn't like the location (frankly, I'm not crazy about it). Actually, the start-up company seems to want me bad enough that they'll create a position for my wife (she could bring them a ton of value, actually). But, she doesn't want it. If I really want the job, one possibility is a long-distance relationship, where we visit each other on weekends/etc...
Anyways, basically, this is nearly non-starter. I've done long distance twice, it's not really a healthy thing, and it certainly doesn't work unless there is an end in sight... and I don't know what that would be.
Oof, yeah, that doesn't sound like a great adventure that would result in a better quality of life for you and your wife.
Your issue is in defining success. You have worked hard and presumably done well, but your industry doesn't value your work unless a product is successful, even though that success or failure is largely out of your control.
You've already pinpointed though that that's someone else's definition of success. That's how others value your work and your career, but it doesn't have to be how you do.
I'll give you an example.
I'm currently in grad school. Btw, I was a health professional and I had a side hustle in finance and management consulting, since you were curious. Anyhoo, I'm in grad school for a different allied health profession now. This is my second time getting a clinical graduate degree, so I have a huge benefit of experience.
I know that our grades don't matter. They will never matter. Our passing grade is so high that literally everyone who passed knows more then enough to practice. The difference between getting a decent grade in a course and a really high grade also has little to do with relevant knowledge. The students getting the top grades aren't going to be the best clinicians, they're the one who are the most neurotic about APA formatting in their papers, who research each instructor in advance to understand their quixotic grading quirks.
They work their asses off and stress themselves into burnout for a few grade points here and there that don't and never will ever matter and that extra work will have no impact on their future ability in their career.
They're killing themselves for nothing.
However, they're in a system with its own measures of their value and they're buying into it. They don't have to, there's no need to, but they're allowing an organization to dictate to them the value of their work, and worse, they internalize it as the value of themselves.
The worst part is that the students most obsessed with top grades are actually neglecting the work it takes to develop clinical skills. That extra work of watching demonstrations and practicing doesn't get them any extra grade points, so they don't invest in it. On average, they'll be among the weakest clinicians starting out.
The point I'm trying to make is that no one has the power to tell you the value of you or your work unless you assign that power to them.
Your boss can judge your work, of course, but you don't actually have to value their judgement. What
actually matters to you are the rewards and consequences of whatever someone else thinks of you. But it's up to you to decide if those rewards and/or consequences will benefit or detract from your overall quality of life.
So look at my program, OBVIOUSLY I care about passing. Not passing would come with consequences that I absolutely do not want. So I profoundly care what my instructors think of my quality of work to the point that I pass with a solid margin. However, if I lose 3-5% because of small APA formatting mistakes, I really, really don't care.
I only give my instructors evaluation power insofar as it impacts my quality of life. If one instructor gives me an 83% while another gives me a 93% for what I know is identical quality of work, I just shrug and assume they mark differently. I know the quality of my own work, I'm more than capable of assessing it by now.
So what about your work?
Why does it affect you if your products aren't commercially successful. What are the actual, real, tangible rewards and consequences for you if factors outside of your control result in success or failure of a product?
Are you paid more or less? Is your job at risk?
What is the *actual* impact on your quality of life? Beyond being assessed as "successful" despite so many elements of that success having nothing to do with you?
What value does that "success" actually have for you? Let's say the majority of the products you worked on became hugely successful, again, largely due to factors beyond your control. What would that actually mean for you? Why would that scratch the itch of really having accomplished something professionally?
And yeah, let's look at that whole professional accomplishment thing. I've done a lot of that. Really impressive shit.
None of it matters. And when you chase it, none of it ever feels like enough. I'm going to use another academic example. I remember as a highschool student thinking getting a master's degree was such a huge deal. Then in undergrad it seemed like every half decent student got a master's degree. Then a PhD seemed so impressive, but then I worked in research and a lot of the PhD were duds with dead end careers. Publishing seemed like a massive accomplishment, then I learned about first author publishing, then tenure, blah, blah, blah
I have so many friends who are tenured professors who publish like machines and guess what, they don't feel particularly accomplished or exceptional. I've worked with countless doctors and dentists drowning in imposter syndrome. I've had many dinners with billionaires who feel insecure compared to other billionaires.
There's no level of professional or financial accomplishment that can ever really scratch that itch if that's where you choose to center your life. In fact, the more you chase it, the less value each accomplishment seems to have.
Where success is AWESOME is as part of a high-quality, balanced life where it serves to improve your overall quality of life for your whole family.
Think of it metaphorically like making a meal. A really fantastic, gourmet meal that you put some effort into is a lovely part of a full day. But a meal that you literally spent 20 hours slaving to make, that you skipped sleep, exercise, you ignored your spouse, and rejected an invite for lunch with your friends just to focus on making this one insanely demanding meal? Sure, it might be a hell of a meal, but it's just a meal. Was it really worth it compared to a sandwich?
Professional accomplishments are only really satisfying when they benefit your overall well being.
Don't get me wrong, DH and I both highly value our careers and both are heavily invested in doing meaningful, high level work. But not for the sake of work itself, we do it because that's what we enjoy and that's what increases our quality of life.
Again, our jobs work for us, we don't work for them.
I won't do work that damages my metrics, I just won't, neither will DH. We would both very happily pick up and move to a crazy new location for an amazing job opportunity but ONLY if the net effect would be an increased quality of life for both of us.
And we would have a solid contingency plan in case it wasn't.
What real life benefit do you get from doing this drastic move if your general quality of life for both you and your wife actually drops? What is the end result?
Look into your future. Let's say your startup is a massive success, again, largely due to factors out of your control. But let's say your marriage is worse, or over, your health is worse, and your startup made you a ton of money.
Okay great. So what? Is that really going to feel like "success" at that point. What are you going to do, be the douchebag who tells everyone you meet that you once were part of a successful startup?
Ate you going to buy a super expensive car to communicate to everyone around you that you are a success??
Will anyone care?? Will anyone whose opinion that matters to you really care? No one I care about really gives a flying fuck about anything I've ever done. My DH is in the midst of doing extremely important work and barely anyone is even interested to understand what his job actually is.
The ONLY reason I'm excited about the work he's currently doing is because he's SO HAPPY doing it and I find it interesting so it gives us a ton to talk about. He sends me articles to read so that I'll understand his work. We're needs, so that's like, super sexy for us.
Would your wife be excited by this startup? Would it be a huge adventure that the two of you would be on together? Or would it be just you asking her to sacrifice for you to scratch a professional itch that isn't actually ever likely to be satisfied?
I know A LOT of wildly successful people. And I can tell you from experience that the ones who have a deep, profound satisfaction with their life's work are the ones who figured out how to benefit their general well being and their families along the way. It's the folks whose spouse was 1000% on board, where the vision of success was collective and very clear. Where all parties were comfortable with the trade offs because they took charge of defining what success for themselves would look like.
The miserable ones were where one party subscribed to an external definition of success, where sacrificing their well being and that of their partner/family always felt necessary. Where critical metrics of life suffered for all parties because they were living by a definition of success that they didn't set for themselves.
It's perfectly fine if this start up and all of the sacrifices it requires are what you decide is best for you. But only if you and your wife have a shared vision and definition of success, shared indicators of success, shared indicators of failure, and a solid agreement as to what sacrifices are worth it and what aren't. And most importantly, when to walk away.
Lastly, I want to leave you with one more question.
You describe your current work as developing products that may or may not be "successful" largely due to factors outside of your control and talk about how the higher the stakes, the more stress there is for you, even though that actually has little relevance to your actual ability and quality of work.
Why then would you want to join a startup where it's the
exact same dynamic where your work can only do so much and the success or failure is largely due to factors outside of your control?
It seems like taking on the
exact same aspects of your existing career that you dislike most and just amping the stakes up by orders of magnitude
What will this get you other than a massive increase in stress?? How does doing what you're currently doing but with higher stakes improve your quality of life??