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7 Important, Life-Changing Lessons I Learned While I Worked As A Janitor

Alexander Graham Bell

I got fired on Dec. 31, 2013, but the decision was really my own. Due to some unexpected circumstances, I could not continue doing my well-paid and quite secure job any longer.

Those circumstances had messed up my career; but, it also threatened the possibility of living a life I was dreaming of. Things didn’t get better over time. I lost any hope and fell into despair. Three months later, I was out of money. With no other options, I took a low-paying  job to survive.

There’s no doubt about it: my old, comfortable life had ended. All my hopes and expectations fell apart. I had hit the ground.

However, like for others, the lowest point in my life became the starting point for something new.

Now, hitting rock bottom was tough enough. It’s painful; but, when you get up and dust yourself off, you may find that you’re standing on a solid surface. You’ll discover that there’s no deeper hole to fall into. Rather, you can build something different and fresh upon the ground you’ve just hit.

The previous skyscraper of my life had been shaky and fell apart. Perhaps the reason was that I had chosen the wrong foundation to construct it on. Perhaps, I was listening to other people’s opinion and advice when choosing the place where to build and the way to build it. I was building my life the way everyone wanted. I was scared that if I chose another foundation and gave my skyscraper a different shape and color, I would be criticized and everybody would laugh.

So, it’s no big surprise that every wind-flaw, whether a critical opinion or casual disapproving glance, would shake it. And, it’s no wonder that it eventually fell down.

Doing unpretentious low-paying work gave me time to reevaluate the very conception and blueprint of the skyscraper I wanted to build. It gave me permission to let go of the phantom ephemeral values and achievements I had held onto so tightly – to focus on that which has real meaning to me. What is more important is that this job gave my mind the freedom from the conventions of society.

If you have the time, I’d like to share with you the precious lessons this janitorial job taught me.

1 – Waking Up Early

As a , I have to get up early. Sometimes on snow days, I have to get up extremely early. I can’t help but wonder how I am able to accomplish so much on these days. I am not talking about the job (I spend up to six hours there). I mean on my personal projects; the projects I spend my free time on.

When you wake up early, you get all this extra energy and motivation that lasts all day.

I’m also working on a personal project before I go to work. Waking up early gives you a small bit of satisfaction at the beginning of the day. This is extremely important if you’re going through a difficult period in your life.

2 – Effective Multi-Tasking

Multi-tasking used to be among the top advice personal development gurus would give you if you asked how you could boost your productivity. However, it’s been recently I noticed an opposite tendency: articles revealing that’s it not as effective as it was once have been showing up on the Internet.

Unless you’re driving an Apache attack helicopter, it’s more productive to stay focused on one task.

Nevertheless, a repetitive, monotonous work like a janitorial position provides you with a way to benefit from multi-tasking and doing two useful things at the same time. For example: while I am sweeping a street or some other cleaning work, I’m also listening to an audiobook. During the break, I can write down my thoughts about the book.

(I reference the Apache attack helicopter, because these pilots are known to be the best multitaskers in the world. They have to control a significant number of gauges while also keeping the helicopter in the sky. They are trained to receive information from different sources simultaneously.

As Ed Macy writes in his book “Apache”, the pilot can read a book and listen to the radio, and understand what’s written and being said. Moreover, they can read two books at the same time, each by one eye.

Of course, candidates tend to get or suffer with severe headaches, insomnia, nausea or extreme mental overload while they do train. Only one in eight becomes an actual pilot.

3 – Clean Up On The Inside

Most people worry about how it looks than how it really is. They focus their attention on the outer appearance than their inner one. They put their efforts into looking clean and neat. While appearance is important, is it more important than the inner being? I don’t think so!

I can clean up the street; but, I can’t clean up people’s minds – the ones who walk this street every day and litter. My point is this: less trash inside means less trash outside.

4 – Never-Ending Growth

I certainly do not want to work as a for the rest of my life. I was to put my skills and knowledge to better use.

Still, I can’t deny how much this job motivates me to improve and grow. I read more. I blog more. I take courses at Coursera and develop my computer game. I do all the things that I didn’t have time before with my previous jobs.

I take advantage of all my free time – no matter how short it is – to learn something new, to come up with a creative idea or to do something useful.

The benefit of this job is that it provides you with a perfect balance between physical and mental work. When I’m done cleaning the area I’m responsible for, I can dive deep into some intellectual activity. When my brain becomes overwhelmed and tired, I take care of that by doing my janitorial, physical work.

5 – Humility

When I say humility, I mean the highest possible sober self and situation in which you find yourself in – an assessment of you and that situation. This is the acceptance of truth about what’s currently going on in your life. Being humble means to gather the strength available to you, at this very moment, to meet your goals. To understand and admit the fact that they could now be unattainable to you.

Humility, as I understand it, is not giving up on your dreams. Rather, humility is to make you see the steps you can take at this moment, based upon the current circumstance and the resources you have at your disposal.

6 – Modesty

What does a man actually need for living a meaningful, fulfilling life?

  • Does he need a prestigious car to be more benevolent?

  • Does he really need that brand new phone to be more productive?

  • Does he need to live in a luxury mansion to be creative?

  • Does he need to buy new clothes every season to be happy?

He doesn’t need any of it!

I possess two pairs of jeans, which also applies to many clothing items. That is more than enough to follow my dream.

I am perfectly happy with my three-year-old laptop, which lets me to develop my computer game and do some blogging.

I may not be able to invest a large sum of money in a business venture. And, my bank may not credit me because I have just a monthly salary of $120. However, I have created and accomplished much more of what has value to me in this year than in the prior five.

7 – Change Is Inevitable

Except for the unexpected – death and terminal illness – everything that’s happening to you has a reason. It happens because you actually want it.

Yes, sometimes life, God or the universe (whatever you call it) moves in mysterious ways and plays hard ball. However, it only does this because you don’t demand a chance in yourself. If left with no other choice, it’ll be force to act tough.

It may get tired of your “maybe tomorrow” or “I need more time to think”. It may get tired of your endless promises to change, when you fail to act on those vows.

At every fork in my life, I used to take the safe trodden path. Every time life handed me an opportunity to change it, I justified my choice of keeping status quo with an excuse – someday I’ll venture into the unexplored world (I’m just not ready now and need more time to prepare). However, that day was always lost somewhere in the distance uncertain future.

Tired of the uncertainty, life took control of everything and put me in a situation that I had no other option but to take the path I had longed for an avoided at the same time. It was this path that was the only one available to me.

Today, I stand firmly on the ground I hit more than a year ago. I’m building my new skyscraper… and I’m not rushing it. I’m giving it time. I don’t know how high it’s going to be; but, I know for sure that it’s going to have a strong foundation, which will be hard to destroy. I enjoy long walks and being with my girlfriend. I like to see how people accept the work I’ve created, even if they criticize it. And, I continue to do the janitorial work.

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