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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. That was amazing. I’m speechless.

  2. I know I’m coming to the party late, but it’s because I was hosting my own party – a party Jon made possible by helping me craft a “home run” guest blog post.

    If anyone is serious about getting paid to change the world, they should get in on his Guest Blogging Program.

    For sharing your story, your expertise, and your support and encouragement, I can’t thank you enough.

  3. Wow! this was an amazing story, it was very motivational and I am truly inspired! God Bless you and keep doing the great things that you do!

    Thank Your

  4. Cheryl Walters says: 05/20/2011 at 2:47 am

    This post couldn’t have come to me at a more monumental time in my life and I thank you. Your story is truly one that makes us all realize how important life is and to live it to the fullest. I plan on contacting you to receive the advice needed to start writing full time – for myself – to help others. Thank you again Jon.

  5. Good God!…You are an inspiration!

  6. Wow. What a story and what an inspiration. I never would have known it from all the emails and blogs and videos.

    Thank you for sharing your personal story with us.

  7. Ahh, c’mon Jon—a little accident and a distracting condition? What’s really bothering you?

    Really though, your moxie makes me ashamed for all the trivial complaints I make about things (rather than my own infernal self-limiting thinking) preventing me from doing anything in life. A helluva powerful post, and a difference-maker. Thank you.

  8. Everything they all said. I knew some of this, not all. It’s not often someone’s story can completely shift the way you look at your world. Thank you. I’m so pleased to be among those you coach.

  9. Simply, awesome.

    Thanks for sharing your amazing story.

  10. I’ve dreamed the dream that you are lviing and I thank you sincerely for sharing your joy, trialbs and triumphs. You are the proof that I need to make the change and be the person I dream of being. Inspiring. Motivating. Moving. I was inspired by the first part and motivated to make the change, take the leap and change my life. I am moved by your compassion, in sharing your story with the rest of us. I don’t know how to say thanks for writing, for inspiring and for moving fowards always.

  11. Thank you, Jon. Your story puts a lot of things in perspective and shows how, if you really want to do something, no excuses in the world can get in your way.

    Truly inspiring.

  12. I too just want to say thank you for sharing your incredibly inspirational story. I have big dreams (that don’t include professional blogging), but this makes me feel even more confident that I will be able to see them to fruition. You rock.

  13. Jon,

    I’d like to write more about how your story made me feel, but alas, I’ve been moved to tears so much that I cannot see my screen and can barely see my keyboard.

    Thanks for the kick in the behind.

    Krizia

  14. Thank you very much for hopeful article. It is very inspiring.

  15. yolee says: 05/20/2011 at 5:45 am

    The saying “if you think you can or you think you can’t either way you’re right.” Author unknown. To say
    you are absolutely, unequivocally, THE most awesome and inspiring “blog writer” is an understatement!
    Thank you soooooo much for sharing such touching and heartfelt personal information about yourself.
    You are what life is about…being in service to others and the rewards speak for themselves. May God
    continue to bless, protect and preserve you so that others can continue to learn some very valuable
    lessons from you on “beingness” if there is such a word. THANK YOU!

  16. chandra shekar says: 05/20/2011 at 6:02 am

    What can I say!!.. Awe inspiring story…Thanks for sharing

  17. This was probably the best post I’ve read so far on a blog… on any blog. And I’ve read a lot. In fact this is the first post ever that I’m going to print out and read it aloud, again and again. Bravo Jon.

  18. You are one VERY inspiring guy.
    I struggle with depression, caused entirely from my work, so I have finally resigned. Done the same work for 38 years, and now it’s gone.
    Reading your post here really humbles me, but inspires me at the same time, so thanks for that old son.
    K. {:o)

  19. Fantastic article. Thanks for the inspiration, the wake up call and kick in the butt!

    Our new mantra…YES I CAN – YES WE CAN

  20. Givonne Knights says: 05/20/2011 at 9:33 am

    Jon, AMA forwarded your article to my Twitter account, a fact I appreciate for its content is quite an eye-opener. Sincere thanks to you Jon and to the AMA.

  21. Thank you for your spirit, Jon, and for the proof that it CAN be done, you just have to go for it and mean it!

    Best wishes,

    Peter

  22. That was the most thought provoking and inspirational blog post I have ever read. And it inspires me to keep going with my tech blog.

  23. Wow. I’m in tears. I’m sure thousands of people before me have said this to you but… thank you for your powerful words. This applies not just to bloggers, but, me, a visual artist or anyone wanting to be a freak and do something out of the ordinary.

  24. I don’t even have words for this post. Simply terrific. Good for you and the example you set for all of the dream chasers.

  25. Wow. Now that’s inspiration.

  26. This is one of the most inspiring stories I have read Jon, if anyone ever doubts that they can succeed then all they have to do is read this!

    Thanks for posting!

    Bren

  27. Holy comments! This seems to be the most popular post on problogger, ever! You truly are an inspiration! Wow. I think I might just have to pinch a girl’s butt in your honor as well (hehe, kidding of course)!

  28. Jon,

    I’d never heard of you until this post. I’d heard of copyblogger and even visited the site on occasion, but this post was my first exposure to you.

    I was just cruising along reading the post until I got to the photo of you and it stopped me dead in my tracks. Just one day after posting this I happen to stumble on this post. Here I am trying to figure out how to get my brain back so I can immerse myself in photography and maybe write a few iPhone/Android apps to make money. I mean, I’m not feeling sorry for myself, but I am wishing I could do all the things I used to be able to do……

    I guess I keep comparing where I am with where I was and that’s a bummer instead of taking stock of what I still have. I can’t read, but I can still write….. Instead of knocking my head against the closed door of “used to” why not walk through the open door of “still can”?

    I’ll have to check out some of your other projects now. So, I’ve figured out how to make my Mac read to me and I can still type. If I can have the Mac read it back I can follow along well enough to proof my text. You’ve got me thinking, bro.

    Thanks,
    carlos

  29. Hi Jon
    Thank you so much for sharing your amazing story. I was so moved and so excited about the future of my blogging career from everything you told me. I’m a little scared, and sometimes I do feel like quitting, but it’s all the reasons you listed above, about wanting to help people and spend more time with family etc that makes me what to keep going. It’s funny to think that we really can change the world through our writing. You have changed my world today. Your story has given me even more faith to go on and reach my blogging and life goals.
    For that, thank you.
    All the best and keep writing!
    Cheers,
    Lisa

  30. wow. just wow.

  31. Now that, THAT is one hell of a story!

    It’s amazing how such a tragic event can end up changing one’s life (and the lives of others) for the better.

  32. Great story and thanks for sharing. I agree that people can do it. I quit my job about a year ago and I feel like it was the best decision I’ve made in my career. Although, I’m not quite as brave as you are and I’m sure many others aren’t either. I prefer to encourage a slow and steady form of blogging that steadily grows into something powerful and wonderful. To me, it’s more about the choice between watching another TV show or building your blog (although, I have a network of TV blogs, so in that case I needed to do both). That’s the hard choice you have to make day in and day out. Plus, you can’t just work long hours. You have to work smart too. If you do that, as you say, you can make it! I haven’t even had the cry in the pillow days either.

  33. Dear Jon,

    Thank you so much for posting this. I am at a turning point in my life where I am considering giving up my 8-4 job and becoming a full-time writer. I have just had a long holiday from work (I’m a teacher) and in that time I became so dedicated to my writing and blogging. Like you, I woke up early and went to bed late, blogging and writing the whole day; like you, I wanted to provide a service to others and like you, I want to escape from a situation that is just not making me happy. I’, back at school now and I feel like I’m wasting away my real talents just so that I can have a regular, meager income. Unlike you, however, I have a wife and child, and that makes my decision to leave all the harder. My wife is afraid that I wont make enough money and I’m afraid that I won’t be able to provide for my son. But I have an overwhelming feeling that now is the time to take the risk. I am already making some money online and I believe that if I could dedicated all my time to, I’d soon be making much more.

    Thank you, this post has given me the confidence to make my decision. You are an inspiration!

  34. This is the most inspiring thing I have read in a long time. Awesome.

  35. What an incredibly inspiring post! Thank you so much for sharing YOU with us!

  36. Wow,
    What an amazing story Jon,i cant wait to get to the point where i can help people and also spend more time with my family.I am “freaking” inspired “right freaking now”
    Thankyou for you blog :)

  37. Sanny says: 05/20/2011 at 9:22 pm

    This is great post (well-written, shocking, attention-grabbing, etc). However, I fail to understand why people seem to only get “inspiration” from someone who nearly died over 16 times before the age of 16, was in a car crash and became paralysed. I understand the personal triumph. I understand how hard and difficult it must have been for you – kudos for that. Anyone can tell you that you can live your dreams. I don’t know, maybe I believe it’s easier for you to take a chance, take a risk because (no offence intended) as you said no one expects much from you in the first place. That doesn’t mean that I don’t think your opinion isn’t important or valid. It means that I don’t see why any reader should pursue their dreams from something you said over something a normal digital nomad said. The complexities of the human mind. I’m also not saying they shouldn’t change their lives due to your post. I just wonder what is it in humans that fuels us to be in awe of people who manage to follow our dreams who also defeat death/excel extraordinarily/overcome diversity.

    Sorry, I love a debate/expressing my opinion.

    I truly did enjoy your post. However, I think I enjoyed the response more.

  38. I would say its the spirit but not the body which makes you successful. Even on wheelchair, your spirits made you a prominent figure in your community.
    Wish you much more success

  39. Jackmartini says: 05/21/2011 at 1:31 am

    Inspiring sure. Great writing too. But let’s not fool ourselves here and think that you charging 50 to 300 an hour for business advice is actually changing the world. You’re not doing anything uplifting. kids are still starving, the homeless are still homeless and everything that was bad is still bad. You havn’t changed anything but the balance on your bank account. I’m not saying that’s a bad thing. You’re living the dream. But let’s not call this world changing stuff, because all that’s doing is causing a disservice to all those who dedicate themselves to truly changing the world by acting selflessly. By accepting large sums of money in exchange for knowledge is simply a business transaction. No different then a hooker selling her goods on a street corner. Unless of course you want to acknowledge that even the hooker is changing the world as well :)

  40. Jon, I am moved beyond words can say with your story and inspiration.

    Thank you for all you have already done for me and so many others.

    The world is a better place because of your presence in it.

    Love and gratitude

    Arvind

  41. Charlotte says: 05/21/2011 at 2:48 am

    Fantastic, uplifting story!!!!

  42. God!!!!!!! You’re awesome in all ways. I’m good to GO. I don’t have any excuse or what so ever not to make it in life.

    God bless you real good Jon. Amen

  43. Thank you. Your daily affirmations of a mother’s profound love and unflinching resolve make the perfect counterpunch to a horrific disease.

  44. Great and so inspiring…i always tell my friend that who worked for other but not satisfied with their job. Quit Now! do what you love to do…live your life to the fullest…do what you happy to do and money will come slowly..don`t worry. Just do it!

  45. That was truly inspirational on so many different levels. I applaud you for standing up for your dreams and following them. I guess Nelson Mandela was right “There is no passion to be found playing small- in settling for a life that is less than the one you are capable of living”

  46. What an inspiring story and great example for the rest of us Jon. There are always going to be challenges, it’s what we make of them that really matters. Thank you so much for sharing your amazing story!

  47. “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.”

    Consider this my official kick in the butt!

  48. What an awesomely inspirational post! Thanks!

    Like some of the other commentators I too am at a turning point in my life – I quit my day job less than a month ago and I’m working hard to get my software business off the ground. On ton of that there’s a good chance I’ll be moving within the next 4-6 months. It’s a scary but exciting time – and posts like this really keep me motivated.

    Keep up the great work!

  49. Jon,

    I know you have heard all before from reading just a few comments, but thank you for your story and the example you set. I am just beginning and tenative, but through WA and links to bloggs and contributors like yourself- I am finding a new community of educated, helpful, and generous folks who are leading by example instead of motivating by greed. IT is refreshing. I was afraid that there was nothing left on the internet but MLM and get rich scams- GLTA who are diligent, honest, and hardworking.

  50. Thanks for sharing your story…

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