franchise articles, self-employment

Franchise articles

Seeking Self-Employment? Ask Walter Mitty.

Nicholas A. Bibby
Copyright. All rights reserved.

When it comes to self-employment, people often wrestle with the decision until their heads literally hurt. If you find yourself in that situation, try an easy, unsophisticated way to peek inside of yourself and take a vacation from the difficult question of "should I be employed and what business is right for me?"

However, in order to take your vacation, you have to take Walter Mitty with you.

I may be pushing the English Lit thing a little bit, but James Thurber provided us with a great "career launching pad," although he probably never intended it that way. One of Thurber's most endearing characters is Walter Mitty. If you already know him, you probably like him, as he is both fun and entertaining. If you don't know him, then let me introduce you; he's easy to like, and he lives in every one of us.

Walter Mitty was a post WWII character that lived a "secret life" of escapism through his vivid imagination. When engaged in any of life's mundane activities, Walter would escape the situation by closing out the real world and travel into the fantasy world of Secret Agent Mitty, or heroic pilot, Captain Walter Mitty. His active imagination made fun reading because he took the reader on exciting adventures, but he also showed us a part of ourselves that we should learn to embrace and use to better our lives.

In my opinion, James Thurber gave us the story of this middle-aged man in order to show us at least two things.

First, Walter displayed the alter ego in all of us. His mental adventures were not possible in his real life, but they did represent some of the ideals that he felt strongly about. He was, in his own mind, a heroic action figure ready to save the world and its inhabitants from harm. If Walter "could have" become his action characters, he most likely "would have" done so. He fantasized over good things, not bad or immoral things. A hero was what he wanted to be.

Second, Thurber, through Walter, gave us "permission" to let our minds wander. He showed us contentment through escapism. Naturally, if the author chose to have Walter fantasize about the darker side of life, the ID would not have done much for quality career planning. However, Walter's positive imagination, in fact, can teach us something about planning our lives, and yes, our lives as entrepreneurs. Here's how.

The common threads in Walter's secret characters are action, heroism, justice and commitment to a cause. So, with just a little bit of mental exercise and creativity it is not hard to make sense of his imaginings relative to a more peaceful and rewarding lifestyle.

For example, if he was physically unable to be a pilot, or not stealthy enough to be an undercover agent, he could certainly work close to, or around those professions. Administrative work in law enforcement, or ticket agent for an airline might have been logical choices. Get the idea?

OK, I won't beat this thing to death, but having joy in our work, indeed having joy in our lives, is a function of using our God given talents, skills and preferences. I'm not suggesting that we use pure fantasy to choose the right business opportunity, but I am saying that we should accept the personal insight provided to us through our imagination. Yes, there are more sophisticated means of choosing a business, and I'd hate for you to purchase Thurber's book rather than use our Focus Program for Emerging Entrepreneurs
(emerging-entrepreneurs.com), but hey, you might try both, his for good reading, and my program for personal insight into your self-employment. Good luck.

Copyright, Nicholas A. Bibby. All rights reserved.