Episode 253 | Watch on YouTube | Listen on Buzzsprout
43% of mid-career adults did some kind of job-related learning last year. That means most people didn’t.
That’s not actually the number that worries me.
An email I got this week
I got an email from a listener. I’ll call him Mark. Here’s roughly what he wrote:
“Hey Dale, love the podcast. Things are good on my end. Busy, but good. Kids have practice three nights a week, my wife and I are handling the usual stuff — bills, the house, all of it. Work is fine. Nothing exciting, but fine. I’m not chasing a promotion or trying to learn anything new right now. Honestly, there’s nothing else I really want to do. But if I’m being honest, that last part bugs me a little. I feel like I should want more. Like I’m supposed to be doing something. I don’t know. Anyway, keep up the podcast.”
I read that a few times.
My diagnosis
I say this with zero judgment, because I think most people are somewhere in that email.
The first two-thirds of it is completely normal. Family, work, the day-to-day grind. Nothing wrong with any of that.
It’s the last few lines that tell you what’s actually going on. “There’s nothing else I really want to do.” Immediately followed by, “that bugs me a little.”
Those two sentences don’t sit next to each other if this were a real decision. If Mark had actually sat down and decided, “I’m choosing stability, my family is the priority, I’m intentionally not chasing anything else” — there wouldn’t be guilt attached to it. He’d feel settled. Instead he feels uneasy.
That unease is the tell. It shows up when someone has stopped growing without ever deciding to.
Two people, same words
Picture two people who both say, “I’m happy where I am.”
One means it. Thought it through, loves the work, family’s the priority, chose stability on purpose. Worth respecting.
The other never actually asked the question. Life got busy — kids, a mortgage, meetings, routine — and one year quietly became ten. Now he can’t picture doing anything else. Mark sounds like the second person, and the guilt in his email is the giveaway.
Why drift is invisible
Nobody sits down one day and decides, “I’m done growing.” It’s smaller than that. You stop reading. You stop meeting new people. You stop asking questions. You stop trying new things. You stop imagining other possibilities.
None of those moments feel like a decision. That’s exactly why it’s worth checking on purpose — instead of finding out ten years later, the way Mark just did in one email.
This isn’t about going back to school
To be clear, this isn’t an argument for another degree, a startup, or chasing a promotion. The real question is simpler: are you still intentionally designing your future? That could be learning how to use AI tools, mentoring someone, consulting on the side, writing, teaching, volunteering, a certification, or building something small outside of work. The specific thing matters less than whether you’re still choosing to grow.
The mirror test
Four questions, no wrong answers, just information:
1. If you lost your job tomorrow, what options would you actually have?
2. What have you learned this year that made you more valuable?
3. What new opportunity exists today that didn’t exist a year ago?
4. If you were designing your career today, would you choose the same one?
If any of those are hard to answer honestly, that’s not a failure. It’s information — the same information hiding underneath Mark’s email.
The challenge
If you’ve genuinely, intentionally chosen stability, that’s a good outcome. But if you’ve simply drifted there without ever deciding — and felt that same low-grade guilt Mark described — today’s a fine day to start asking questions again.
A career built by choice brings peace. A career built by drift often brings regret.
If Mark’s email sounded a little too familiar, that uncertainty is exactly what the free Moving Past Obstacles resource at dalecallahan.com is built to work through. It takes about ten minutes and gives you a straight answer instead of a guess. I sent it to Mark. If this episode landed for you too, go grab it.
Book a call with Dale: https://calendly.com/dalecallahan/30min
Grab “Moving Past Obstacles” FREE download
📄 Download the free Moving Past Obstacles guide to help you work through what’s actually in the way:
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