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How to Quit Your Job, Move to Paradise and Get Paid to Change the World

This guest post is by Jon Morrow of Smart Blogger (formerly Boost Blog Traffic)

After all, that’s the dream, right?

Forget the mansions and limousines and other trappings of Hollywood-style wealth. Sure, it would be nice, but for the most part, we bloggers are simpler souls with much kinder dreams.

We want to quit our jobs, spend more time with our families, and finally have time to write. We want the freedom to work when we want, where we want. We want our writing to help people, to inspire them, to change them from the inside out.

It’s a modest dream, a dream that deserves to come true, and yet a part of you might be wondering…

Will it?

Do you really have what it takes to be a professional blogger, or are you just being dumb? Is it realistic to make enough money from this to quit your job, or is that just silly? Can you really expect people to fall in love with what you write, or is that just wishful thinking?

Sure, it’s fun to dream about your blog taking off and changing your life, but sometimes you wonder if it’s just that: a dream. This is the real world, and in the real world, dreams don’t really come true.

Right?

Well, let me tell you a little story…

How I quit my job

Jon's van

My van

In April of 2006, I was hit by a car going 85 miles an hour.

I didn’t see him coming, and I don’t remember much about the accident, but I do remember being pulled out of my minivan with my shirt on fire. The front end of the van was torn off, gasoline was everywhere, and my legs were broken in 14 places.

For the next three months, I had nothing to do but endure the pain and think about my life. I thought about my childhood. I thought about my dreams. I thought about my career.

And overall, I decided I didn’t like the way things were going.

So I quit.

I sold everything I owned. I stopped paying most of my bills. I turned in my letter of resignation, worked my two weeks, and then disappeared without saying goodbye.

Hearing about my insanity, a friend called and asked me, “Well, what are you going to do now?”

“I don’t know,” I told him. “Maybe start a blog.”

And so that’s what I did.

For the next three months, I didn’t just tinker around with blogging. I dedicated myself to it. I started work at 8 AM in the morning, and I kept going until 11 PM at night. I didn’t watch television. I didn’t see my friends. From morning till night, I was writing, reading, and connecting with other bloggers. Nothing else.

Within a month, I had On Moneymaking off the ground, and within two months, it was getting 2,000 visitors a day and Performancing nominated it for the best business/money blog of the year. A couple of months after that, Brian Clark asked me to become the Associate Editor of Copyblogger, and so I sold On Moneymaking for five figures and went to work at one of the most popular blogs at the world.

And amazingly, that’s just the beginning of the story.

How I moved to paradise

Have you ever woken up one day and realized you secretly despise everything about where you live?

The weather is horrible. Your neighbors are jerks. You don’t like inviting anyone to your home, because it’s always a wreck, and you’re ashamed of how it looks.

Well, that’s exactly what happened to me in January of 2009. I was sitting in my pathetic apartment, wrapped up in blankets to keep warm, trying to get some work done on the computer, when it struck me how monumentally stupid it was.

I was a full-time blogger, for God’s sakes. I could do my work from anywhere in the world. Why on Earth was I living in this hellhole?

The only problem was I had no idea where I wanted to go, but a couple of weeks later, the telephone rang, and it was an old friend who had retired to Mazatlan, Mexico. As usual, he was calling to gloat about the weather and the food and the general superiority of the Mexican lifestyle, but instead of just suffering through it this time, I stopped him and said, “No, don’t tell me any more. I’m moving there.”

Jon's office

My office

“What? When?” he stammered.

“I don’t know exactly when,” I told him, “but I’m starting right now.”

Two months later, I took a one-week trip to scout it out and look for places to live. When I got back, I started selling all of my stuff, packing the rest of it into storage, and saying goodbye to friends. Almost one year to the day after our phone call, I hopped in the car and drove just shy of 3,000 miles to my new beachfront condo in the finest resort in Mazatlan.

As I write this, I’m sitting on my balcony with my laptop, watching (no kidding) dolphins jumping out in the Pacific. It’s a sunny day, there’s a nice breeze, and I’m thinking about ordering a piña colada from the restaurant downstairs.

Lucky me, right?

Well, what might surprise you is I left out a piece of the story. It’s the part where I have a fatal disease, I can’t move from the neck down, and yet I essentially get paid to help people. Let’s talk about that part next.

How I get paid to change the world

You know what’s funny?

Jon

Yours truly

The worst part about having a disease like SMA isn’t how everyone treats you like a charity case. It’s not the frustration, anger, or depression. It’s not even the inability to reach over and pinch a cute girl’s butt when you want to (although that’s pretty bad).

No, the worst part is the freakin’ bills.  The doctors. The medication. The nurses.

I added it all up, and the total cost of keeping me alive in the US was $127,000 a year. That’s not rent. That’s not food. That’s just medical expenses.

Granted, I didn’t actually have to pay all that. I had private insurance, Medicaid, other government aid programs, but all that support comes at a price: they control you. The government allotted me only $700 a month to live on, and I had to spend every single cent above that on medical expenses, or they would cut me off.

So for years, that’s what I did. If I made $5,000 one month, I set aside $700 for living expenses, and I spent the other $4,300 on medical bills. Nothing was left. Ever.

And eventually, I got sick of it.

I wanted to make money without having to worry about losing my healthcare. I wanted to take care of my family, instead of them always having to take care of me. I wanted to actually live somewhere nice, not some ratty little apartment built for folks below the poverty line.

The only problem was, it just wasn’t possible for me in US. No matter how I played with the numbers, I couldn’t make it work. So, I did something crazy:

I quit Medicaid. I moved to Mexico. I stopped worrying about myself at all and started a business based on one simple idea:

Helping people.

I found up-and-coming writers who wanted a mentor, and I trained them. I found businesses who wanted to cash in on social media, and I developed their strategy. I found bloggers who wanted more traffic, and I created a course on how to get it.

In exchange, they paid me what they could. Some folks gave me $50 an hour and others $300 an hour, but I treated them all the same, and I dedicated myself to making their dreams a reality.

The results?

Within two months, I was making so much money so fast PayPal shut down my account under suspicions of fraudulent activity. Today, not only am I making more than enough to take care of myself, but a couple of months ago, I got uppity and bought my father a car.

Do you understand how precious that is? For a guy who can’t move from the neck down to buy his father a car?

And the best part is, I’m not making money blogging doing mindless drudgery. I’m changing people’s lives.

Every day, I get emails from readers who say my posts have changed their thinking. Every day, I get emails from students who say my advice has changed their writing. Every day, I get emails from clients who say my strategies have changed the way they do business.

I can’t really believe it. Normally, a guy like me would be wasting away in a nursing home somewhere, watching television and waiting to die, but here I am speaking into a microphone and essentially getting paid to change the world. If my fingers worked, I’d pinch myself.

And here’s the thing:

I don’t want it for just me. I want it for you too.

The reason I told you this whole story wasn’t just to brag but also to convince you of one incontrovertible point:

YOU CAN DO THIS!

You want to quit your job and become a professional blogger?

You can.

You want to travel around the world, living life to its fullest?

You can.

You want to dedicate your every hour to helping people and making the world a better place?

You can.

Because listen … I know it’s horribly cliché, but if I can quit my job, risk the government carting me off to a nursing home because I can’t afford my own healthcare, convince my poor mother to abandon her career and drive my crippled butt 3,000 miles to a foreign country, and then make enough money to support myself, my mother, my father, and an entire nursing staff using nothing but my voice, then what can you accomplish if you really set your mind to it?

My guess: pretty much anything.

No, it won’t be easy. At some point, I guarantee you’ll want to quit. I guarantee people will treat you like you’re insane. I guarantee you’ll cry yourself to sleep, wondering if you made a horrible mistake.

But never stop believing in yourself. The world is full of naysayers, all of them eager to shout you down at the slightest indication you might transcend mediocrity, but the greatest sin you can commit is to yourself become one of them. Our job isn’t to join that group, but to silence it, to accomplish things so great and unimaginable that its members are too awed to speak.

You can do it.

I believe in you.

So get started.

Right freaking now.

Jon Morrow is Associate Editor of Copyblogger. If you’d like to learn more about what it really takes to become a popular blogger, check out his free videos on guest blogging.

About Guest Blogger
This post was written by a guest contributor. Please see their details in the post above.
Comments
  1. What can you say after reading this except TO say: I have NO excuse for anything that I’m not doing! What a great story Jon. It all starts with belief, and to be committed.

    • I agree! That whole real life super story kept me hooked til the end and there were new surprises along the way that were truly inspiring. Congrats on proving to everybody that impossible really is nothing!

  2. Thank you Jon, this is exactly what I needed today. As it was described by another commenter, I too have had a “dowly” start to the day and wondering if it is time to re-think things and go hide in my cave. Not anymore – thank you.

  3. John,

    Thanks for stopping me in my tracks. I mean it.

    I’ve read some of your posts before. I’m a huge fan of Copyblogger, and have learned, (and continue to) so much about business, and how important content is.

    I started a blog focused on my industry-the franchise industry about 5 years ago. I’m also a regular contributor to SBA.gov, Small Business Trends, and OPEN FORUM by American Express.

    John, I never graduated from college. Because I had undiagnosed ADD, (combined with a serious lack of motivation) I barely graduated from high school. Being the class clown was a little more important to me than working hard to get good grades.

    I’m doing things now that I never thought I would. I’m meeting amazing people from all over the world. That’s what having a blog, and being entrenched in social media has done for me. It’s great.

    One more thing; this non-college graduate was approached by a major publisher to write a book on becoming a franchise owner earlier this year.

    That’s all great, and I’m hoping that my book will help me get to the next level. But your story…

    Amazing. You are crushing it every day, and it shows.

    You have created your own paradise, in your own way.

    Your parents must be so proud of their son. Who’s a winner.

    PLEASE keep writing, and sharing. We need you, Jon.

    The Franchise King®
    Joel Libava

  4. Jon, you amaze me. You have to be the most inspirational person I’ve ever talked with. I just want to say THANK YOU for all you do! Your no-excuses approach to life is just what I need to hear.

  5. Love this story! Thank you for sharing it.

    I have been contemplating these questions a lot lately and the answer I keep coming back to is just work your butt off and then get to the next step. Maybe that’s not all there is though because everytime I get to the next step in my career, I look back and say ‘why the heck did I want to be here?’ Being a pro blogger is a dream of many and it takes a lot of work and dedication. I really believe you need to quit your job to do it and do it well. I would love to live in London and blog. That’s what I think about all the time lately but I always have an excuse for not doing it. It costs too much. I will miss everyone. Where am I going to work/live/play? I need to stop asking and start doing. Thanks for the kick in the ass!

    • You’re welcome! And it’s definitely possible. One of my students just quit her job and is moving to London as we speak. :-)

      • Well, to be fair, I have a working husband, but I quit my job before we knew we’d be moving to London. I certainly don’t regret it!

        Come on over and look me up. Both of you! :)

  6. Wow, that was amazing. I’m totally awe struck. Definitely sharing your story!! U rock!!

  7. Dude, I just pinched a girl’s ass in your honor. You have a great outlook on life and I’m truly humbled by your story. The next Piña Colada is on me. Wow, just wow….. Keep on kicking ass Jon.

  8. John, that’s one of the most inspiring stories I’ve read in many years and reading it has simply changed the way I’ve been feeling for most of the day here on a miserable poor excuse of a summer’s day in England. I work fulltime from home too as a blogger and artist, and to be honest I’ve been taking it for granted the last few months, so your story was certainly major, major boot in the rear end. I certainly look forward to more of you posts and hope that your story will continue to unfold.

  9. Wow, what an incredible story , just what I needed to start my day, you just change my perspective on life. I live in El Salvador one of the smallest and poor countries on Central America, I know now that i have follow my dream until I succeed allways having in mind that blogging is not just for making money but for sharing and helping the community, rewards will come later.

  10. Jon,

    THANK YOU for this post! You are a true inspiration and I will always remember this one post when I start to doubt myself or think that “my ideas can’t possibly work” or “who would want to learn from me”. I’m also going to show my 2 girls this post to prove that you can do anything. Brilliant!!

  11. This is an amazing post. I really enjoyed reading it and thank you so much for sharing your story and being an inspiration for so many people!

  12. Hi Jon,

    Thank you for a wonderful story. Love your refrain, “You can do it.” We really can accomplish anything! Yes, don’t listen to the naysayers and return the generic life blue print you got handed at work.

    Enjoy your fabulous view! Giulietta

  13. I think I will print off this post and keep it posted by my computer for daily inspiration. Your a rock star! Thanks for sharing your story and giving us all a swift kick.

  14. Wow, great post, inspiration and motivation to get going. I am consistently surprised how much support there is in the blogging world for going for it full time, it really makes a big impact on people like me. This is a great story, and should remind people to just keep plugging away until it happens. I’m going to save this and use it for future reference. Thank you!

  15. Jon

    You always tell us about how some other guy rated one of your posts as a really good one…

    Well here goes!

    That is the best and most inspiring blog post that I have ever read. Bar none!

    You are a legend, and a mentor I am very thankful for.

    I need to pull my finger out of my @ss, and just work a little harder, more clever and more focused.

    Thanks dude.

    I love your work…

    Dries

  16. Jon, this story make me to think… that i also must do something about my future… want to be like you jon….. inspiring me….

  17. Jon –

    Wow…you and I must be on the same page today. I wrote my post out that was literally mirroring this but obviously different. This week feels like the week to talk about quitting your job :)

    I have to say that one of the hardest things is accepting the changes that come with quitting and living a new life, however, that said I would not trade this for anything.

    And I commend your comments on people doing this despite their situation – I never thought that was possible until actually doing it. They key is just doing it…not talking about it but literally doing it. The world won’t end either..it’s still spinning last I checked :)

    http://www.rewirebusiness.com/get-unstuck/how-to-quit-your-job-and-live-better-despite-your-situation/

  18. That was an amazing article! I’m 6 months into my blogging career and still struggling to bring in traffic/income with the crazy hours of my job and freelance work, but this article definitely inspired some fire under my butt! Thanks so much and I can’t wait to read more of your work!

  19. My husband and I are currently selling everything we own and will be purchasing a travel trailer and traveling good ol’ USA with our two children to go help other people. I figure it will also have GREAT blogability, lol. And I can wittle the hours away typing while my husband drives. I’ve been cleaning out closets all morning, we listed our house for sale on Friday, we’re debt free except for our home and soon that will be gone. Our kids are excited, too!

    If anyone is looking for a 3/2 country cottage 1400 sq ft home secluded on a dead-end road in beautiful East Texas with 2 acres ready for gardening, etc, email me, lol. It’s quite the paradise out here, but our journey awaits!

    I can’t wait to see where life takes us!

  20. everysandwich says: 05/18/2011 at 3:36 am

    This is the first post this week I was actually glad I read. Thank you.

  21. Jon, you’re the second man to ever make me cry at work! (Luckily, this is a good cry and not a “I just got called an idiot by a customer” cry).

    Where do I start? You are an inspiration to all of us little guys/gals. You are living proof that a strong will and a bit of hard work truly pays off! And thanks for not sugar coating the overall experience…I’ve read articles that make blogging sound so easy, but they never mention the struggles faced along the way. It won’t be a cakewalk, but you’ll get there if you want it badly enough.

    I suddenly feel the urge to send this to EVERYONE I know…thank you so much for this fantastic article. Oh, and an even bigger thank you for believing in me! :)

  22. Jon this is the most powerful article i have read for quite a while now. It truly shows if you really want to achieve something you can, and there is nothing stopping you besides yourself.

  23. Absolutely incredible man… I cannot believe the last twist of the story, after the car wreck, I thought that was the worse part. You are really a giant inspiration to many people. Your words at the end hit me strong.

    I CAN DO THIS!!!!

    There are nay-sayers all around… but I CAN do this!!!!

    Thank you VERY VERY VERY VERY much for sharing this amazing story.

    Surfs up,

    I will see you in Mexico Some day!

  24. I loved reading this John. It’s amazing how much we take our lives for granted, and stay stuck in that complaining “it’s not possible” mode. You’ve clearly gotten past that and are now able to show others how to do it too, by example and by pure awesome willpower. I’m so happy for you and the responsibility you took over your own life.

    You rock.

  25. Thanks so much for sharing your sensational perspective on it all. Truly. Thanks.

  26. Wow. This post blew me away. Your story had me in tears. Not sad tears. Good tears.

    You are an inspiration. Thank you for you.

  27. Great great article Jon.

    After reading this ALL people must have NO excuse for not making a living online. But, there seems to be an endless population of people who are creative enough to come up with very nice excuses for not making money online.

  28. So inspirational I can’t even tell you! God bless you and thanks for showing us what really matters!

  29. Tremendous blog post and the fav of the year by far. Truly an inspiration and I can only hope to use this to fuel my own dreams.

  30. Jon…you totally ROCK!

    Yes, we each CAN do, be and have anything that we desire…The only thing that stops us is the story in our heads that says we can’t.
    Thanks for being such an amazing example.

    Rock on!
    Leah

    • Yep, the story in your head is huge, especially right now. Every time I hear someone say, “I can’t find a job, nobody wants me, the world is falling apart,” I actually get really worried about them. On the other hand, when I hear someone say, “No, I don’t have a job, but now I have all this free time, and I might as well do what I love, because now I have nothing to lose,” I know they’ll probably be okay. Same situation, different story, completely different results.

  31. Wow, I think I am at a loss for words and I may be in love with you. Thank you for sharing your touching story. It is eye-opening.

  32. Wow, this really made me sit up and take notice. I have recently quit my job to do exactly this but I have nothing serious like your condition to use as an excuse. You have just gripped life by the, well, you know, and attacked it head on. What a truly marvelous inspiration to everyone. You keep going, keep changing the world, there are people out there that NEED people like you to show them that if they want something badly enough, they really can get it. Love it, love it, love it! You take care of your lovely self!

  33. Hands down, this is the most inspiring story I’ve seen in a long time. Congrats on your success and thank you for the beautiful post.

  34. WOW! WOW! WOW! That pretty much sums my feelings up after reading this. You’re awesome…thank you for helping me to feel awesome, too.

  35. Jon–Thank you for this. This year I considered going on disability but couldn’t make it work financially. It’s an incredibly scary place to be when health care costs run your life. I understand. I don’t have the same problems you have, but mine are just as real. I’m following a similar path to the one you’re on (who knows, we might be neighbors soon) and I’m grateful to hear your success story. Not only that, I’m privileged to take your Guest Blogging class and call you my mentor.

    Many thanks for this great example of superior blogging.

  36. Your own post about Mothers and fighting was one of the most powerful challenges to widen my personal perspective I’ve ever read. Thank you for including the “oh, by the way I have a fatal disease” link. The post was compelling before but this lit it up. And it’s not because of I have a fatal disease of course; it’s your understatement that made it so powerful.

    Thank you for this guest post as a way to get to that one. I’ve now forwarded the link to a bunch of friends and posted it on my own teeny blog. I blog more as an open letter to friends, so I’m not a professional blogger but there’s often so much of interest on Problogger that I have it as a widget on iGoogle. This connection was golden.

    Okay, you know all of this. You’re a pro. My comment is really to say, thank you.

  37. Tammy says: 05/18/2011 at 4:31 am

    Wow! Awesome post! Thanks for sharing! Still looking for that profitable gift that will get me to paradise!

  38. How inspiring. You’re wonderful and I admire you so much!

  39. Wow, I am speechless. I feel like a lunatic sitting here complaining about my job! I am printing this out and taping it around my house and I’m emailing it to friends in the same rut. Thank you for sharing, you are indeed a special person.

  40. Thanks for sharing your story, Jon.

    I had a sense there was something dramatic you’d have to tell, if and when you shared your story.

    I had no idea there would be as many dramatic threads to your experience as there are, and have been.

    Thanks for the thought-provocation you provide here.

    And thanks, as well, for the example you set of making clear decisions and taking the committed actions necessary to change the circumstances you can to far better ones. (Among other things, I love your beautiful blue water view…complete with dolphins!).

    My best, Jon, and thanks again, for so many reasons.

  41. Thank you so much for sharing your story! I have to say it been one of the best blog post I have read in years! I love how you are motivating others by pure example. Thank you for opening my eye’s as I was asking the same questions this last week. Funny how you seem to find answers to the questions you ask without even looking for it.

  42. Thank you Jon for that friendly reminder and inspiring post. It was much needed as I’m trying to do the same thing, quit my job and live my dream, as a traveler and artist.

  43. Wow, beautiful post that went straight to my heart. It really made me check my excuses for why I am not living all of my dreams. Thanks Jon.

  44. Fabio Filho says: 05/18/2011 at 5:02 am

    Jon,

    Sometimes in our life we have the chance to meet people , even if virtually, that inspire us in becoming better persons. Personally I always seek to be around those kind of people.
    Those weho think ahead are the one who do no let life pass by and never get hit by agony, depression, desperation or ansiety.
    More than that, histories like your make us wonder about what we are doing today what we actually sohuld do!
    There is nothing else to say but congrats and thank you. Thansk for sharing , aspriring, creating.

    Cheers

  45. This is a magnificent story. Thank you for sharing this. You are quite an astounding man.

  46. Thank you so much for this inspiring story! I’ve been mulling things over in my head, and this came at exactly the right time for me to do the right thing for myself and my career.

  47. I’m sitting in my office right now, (working hard, obviously… haha, I’m reading posts on quitting this place!!) and I am tearing up.

    This story is so inspiring and amazing, adding to it the fact that you are “disabled” makes it even more awesome. I put “diabled” in quotes, because I believe that there’s nothing disabled about you. What a cool guy and amazing story. Thanks so much for sharing, I can’t wait to get out of here and start my life as a blogger :)

    xxMelissa

  48. Jon,

    What an inspirational story. What is so amazing is you have achieved more than most people without your problems. I can see why you get paid to help others write if you write like this all the time. I think you surely deserve the life you have. And you’re right; if you can do it we can do it too…

    Terry

  49. Error reaching paradise: I don’t have a job to quit!!! :)
    I’m really giving my best to make it in blogging.
    Thanks Jon for this amazing post, for boosting up my hopes and will in a time of a slow and depressing period. Just what I needed to hear (actually, read)!

    All the best to you!

  50. Wow…seems the Universe is conspiring to get it through my thick head that I DO have options! Especially ironic/funny/crazy cool after the post I did this morning about feeling stuck in my 35-year-old career path. I want OUT. I want CHANGE and I want it NOW. Many of my readers feel the same way!

    Thank you JON. You didn’t leave any room at all for one single “But…”, did you!?!?! :)

    Kindest Regards,

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