Developing a Better You

Creative Change: How to Carve Out the Life You Want

When the last of our kids finished college a few years ago, my wife Lisa and I brainstormed about the kind of life we wanted in this new season. We desired to live in a walkable area near one of our kids, eliminate home maintenance, have flexibility to travel, and help me transition to a writing career. To that end, I phased out of my twenty-six year music career, we sold most of our possessions and both vehicles, and moved from a house in Phoenix AZ to an apartment in walkable midtown Sacramento CA. Making those significant changes took time, intentionality, and effort, but the benefits of our radically different lives have been so worth it.

I love the flexibility and creativity of writing, but it has two significant drawbacks – it’s tough to break into and hard to make money. I’ve written three novels so far and am working with my literary agent to edit and submit them to publishing houses. There’s not much I can do about the slow pace of the publishing world – it often feels glacial. But I’m not complaining. I’m the luckiest aspiring author in the world because my amazing wife, New York Times bestselling author of twenty-four books Lisa McMann, is not only my writing coach, she’s also paying the bills while I’m in this career transition.

To help make this life change possible, I’ve gotten creative on how to create a “salary” for myself during this initial period where my work is going out but no money is coming in. It’s not actual paychecks, but I’ve found ways to put time and effort into money saving activities that have had the same impact on our budget as if I had a part-time job:

I MOVED US TO A NEW APARTMENT

We loved our beautiful apartment in a great location, but the rent was high. I asked our maintenance person what other units were available in our building. To our surprise, one was perfect for our needs and significantly cheaper. I contacted management and jumped through all the hoops to change apartments mid-lease, then went through the hassle of moving. Now we’re settled in our new place and saving a significant amount in rent every month.

I CHANGED OUR HEALTH INSURANCE PLAN

I think health insurance companies count on the difficulty of change. They know that once they’ve got you, you’ll likely stay with what you have even as the rates go steadily up and the quality of care leaves a lot to be desired. I went through the complex and incredibly frustrating experience of switching companies. Even with the help of a broker, it was time consuming and sometimes maddening. But after a few months of headaches, we had the same coverage at a more user-friendly company that was way cheaper. Another solid reduction in our monthly expenses.

I DUMPED OUR TIME SHARE

Many years ago when I was young and naive, I got suckered into buying a time share. If what the company told us at the time had been the whole story, it would have made sense, but of course, it wasn’t. They neglected to mention that even after we paid it off, we would not have “free vacations for life.” You’re on the hook forever paying increasing annual maintenance fees and random assessments that you have no control over. We were shelling out over $1,100 a year for something we weren’t using anymore. After seeing the pathetic value of the resale market, I researched a way to just give our ownership back to the time share company in exchange for getting out of our lifetime contract. We’re now free of that painful annual bill.

I RENEGOTIATED OUR INTERNET SERVICE

Often when you sign up with an internet service provider, it’s for an appealing introductory rate. But when the honeymoon’s over, the cost goes up significantly. When ours made the big jump, I called our provider and asked what my options were. It was surprisingly simple to switch over to their latest promotional offer which was even cheaper than our introductory rate. This was another “one and done” lowering of our monthly expenses.

I know our situation is unique in some respects, but I share this story to give you an example of how Lisa and I have been able to carve out the life we really wanted by being willing to think outside the box, make significant changes, and work non-traditionally.

So how about you? What do you want your life to look like? What could you do now to help today’s dream become tomorrow’s reality? Brainstorm. Investigate. Research. Plan. Make a timeline. Start small. Ask for help and accountability. If you do, you’ll be on your way to the life you really want, and you’ll take another step toward Becoming Yourself.

More on this topic and some helpful resources:

RISK = The Price for the Life You Really Want

How to Manage Change: A Story 26 Years in the Making

The Crossroads of Should and Must: Find and Follow Your Passion by Elle Luna

Daily Rituals: How Artists Work by Mason Currey

4 Comments

  1. Bob Douglas

    Matt!
    When your eyes tire and your brain fuzzes, you might consider spending select time assisting folks who wish to rid themselves of their timeshare! This could be very lucrative!

    And be sure to let us know when a novel is published!
    Bob D.

    • Matt McMann

      Haha! I’ll keep that in mind 🙂 And I will definitely let you know on the publishing front. Your encouragement of my writing in 7th and 8th grade was a big part of what gave me the confidence to pursue this dream. Even now, at age 50, I can still very clearly remember you reading the beginning of one of my stories to the class and saying “If it had continued at this level, I would have suggested that it be published.” That meant the world to me. Thanks for being an amazing teacher.

  2. Donna Cochrane

    Wow.. this really hit home for me, Matt! Admittedly, i am a packrat/hoarder, & being a busy housewife & momma, i STILL can never find time to “purge” the clutter. It drives Tim mad, but he loves me. He wants to help, but, well… I’m grabbing stuff out of his hands before it hits the dumpster.. LOL i give you & Lisa many kudos! My brother Steve & sis-in-law, Gena got rid of darn near everything when they moved from Michigan to Texas.. she had to really have a sit down with herself, & planned & figured & gave & tossed.. she told me that it was extremely liberating… i have to try harder – so overwhelming after 13.5 yrs in our “new” house! Anyway, thanks for this!!

    • Matt McMann

      So glad this connected, Donna! I totally get your struggle. Another reader asked about that aspect of this blog post on my facebook posting about it and I shared a bunch more info on how we did it in the comments there if you want to check that out 🙂 You can do it!

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