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Over two months ago I walked out of a 9-to-5 I'd been holding onto…

Over two months ago I walked out of a 9-to-5 I'd been holding onto for most of the past seven months while building on the side. Honestly, I didn't know how to feel about it. Greatest and scariest thing I've done, pretty much at the same time. The 9-to-5 gave me structure I didn't know I was leaning on. Fixed schedule. Clear start and end. You clock off and the day is done. When that goes away, you realise how much mental scaffolding it was providing. The first few weeks without it were a strange kind of disorienting. Not bad. Just different in a way I hadn't prepared for. What I didn't expect was how much the shift would teach me about myself. When you've got no fixed schedule, you find out fast what you actually care about. Where your attention goes without anyone managing it for you. And for me, it kept going back to the same thing: the problem I'd been trying to solve for seven months straight, the one that kept me up at night long before I had the time to work on it properly. That's probably the self-awareness piece I needed. I'd been treating the day job like a safety net but it was really a delay. Not in a dramatic way. Just in the quiet, low-level way where you always have a reason not to go fully all-in. Luckily, my partner was already there. Already committed. And that made the decision feel less like a leap and more like catching up to where things were already heading. I don't think there's a perfect moment to make a call like this. I think you make it when the cost of not making it starts to feel higher than the risk of making it. That's essentially where I was. Still adjusting. Still figuring out the new rhythm. But the bits and pieces are coming together in ways they genuinely couldn't before.

James GoddardJun 3, 2026Published to X — @JamesGodda75737View original ↗

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