There is a particular kind of day at work that I genuinely enjoy. When I follow my boss out to a property and walk through someone’s home with a clipboard, noting the details — the dimensions of rooms, the quality of light, the things a photograph might miss. I move quietly while she speaks with the owner, measuring and observing, turning what I notice into something useful. Later, when I sit down to build the listing, having been there myself makes all the difference. Those days feel like work worth doing.

Then there are the other days.

The ones where I sit at my desk with nothing urgent in front of me, trying to look occupied. Watching the clock in the way you only do when time feels like something being spent rather than used. I manage an office for a local estate agency. I am not underpaid, not overlooked, not mistreated. If anything, I am valued, trusted with details that matter, asked for my opinion, relied upon. Twice a month I work on the adverts for local magazines, and I find I look forward to those days more than I probably should. Occasionally there is a listing presentation to put together, or a meeting to run, and those feel purposeful in a way the quiet stretches do not.

But many days, if I am honest, I am simply filling time until it is acceptable to leave.

It is a curious thing, to be genuinely grateful for a job and quietly restless within it at the same time. I know how fortunate I am. I know many people would be glad of the steadiness, the respect, the reliable pay. I do not take any of that lightly.

But there is a part of me that wants more autonomy than appreciation.

I want to decide what the day will ask of me. I want to work because I have chosen to, not because the clock says I must. I want to leave in the middle of the afternoon without calculating how it looks. If money were not part of the equation, I would have left already. Not out of anger or rebellion, but out of a quiet pull toward something self-directed.

Perhaps this is what happens somewhere around forty. You begin to notice the difference between security and freedom, and the gap between them starts to feel wider than it once did.

I think about what I would do with four hours back each day. The cooking I never quite get round to. The painting that sits waiting. Time with my grandparents, who are not getting any younger and neither am I. And this, the writing, which I love and rarely make space for because the day has already been given to someone else’s schedule.

I am grateful for the life this job supports. Truly.

But somewhere underneath that gratitude, there is a small, persistent voice asking whether it might be possible to build something of my own. Something that earns its keep and still leaves room for a life.

I don’t have the answer yet. But I have started to take the question seriously.

— Kate

If these reflections resonate, you’re welcome to subscribe and receive future posts directly.