Trading the 9-to-5 for fulfillment still comes with a cost
A new international study published in the International Journal of Research in Marketing explores these bold souls who transform their passions into full-time careers in search of fulfillment. The researchers call this phenomenon “eudaimonic consumption careers” (ECCs), where people chase lasting happiness not through material possessions but by making their passion for extraordinary experiences their actual job.
“These workers are after feelings of accomplishment, a life of virtue and greater meaning in life,” says study author Marian Makkar from the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, in a statement. “Happiness can be fleeting and short-lived, but hard work and setting big goals and developing skills to get there is what can bring long-term life satisfaction and fulfillment.”
The authors point out that little research exists about individuals who make permanent escapes into career paths. Through an extensive 10.5-year ethnographic study following snowsports instructors across Canada and New Zealand, researchers uncovered what drives people to abandon traditional career paths, the challenges they face in sustaining these alternative lifestyles, and what ultimately causes some to return to conventional work.
Escaping the 9-to-5 Trap
For many caught in unfulfilling office jobs, reading this study might spark recognition of a deeper yearning—and perhaps offer a roadmap for those brave enough to consider jumping ship.
Imagine waking up every morning genuinely excited about your workday. That’s the reality for snowsports instructors who travel hemisphere to hemisphere chasing endless winter. Rather than seeing their passion as just a weekend escape, they’ve built entire lives around it.
One participant in the study said: “I remember at university my first management lecturer said, ‘you could go on to be a CEO, be on $300,000 a year and have a month off every year to go skiing,’ and I said, ‘or I could go skiing every day and still afford to eat and pay my rent. It’s all I really need, isn’t it?’”
The researchers discovered that people typically embark on these unconventional careers for two main reasons: escaping from something (the drudgery of conventional work) and escaping to something (a life centered around passion and meaning).
Lars, another participant, described snowboarding as an escape route from sedentary modern life. He emphasized the visceral, embodied experience that allows people to release tensions in ways that aren’t available in everyday routines.
Many participants explicitly rejected the conventional life script of acquiring a mortgage, accumulating possessions, and climbing corporate ladders. Lars explained how accepting a traditional job means accepting extremely limited freedom—perhaps twenty days off annually for forty years—and how responsibilities like mortgages, houses, and children create a trap that’s difficult to escape.
Finding Meaning Through Mastery and Community
But these alternative careers aren’t just about avoiding responsibility; they involve a different kind of commitment. The researchers identified a transition that happens when people move from merely enjoying an activity to pursuing mastery and meaning through it.
John, one of the snowboarders studied, described how the sport demands complete focus at high speeds, but with increasing skill, one develops the ability to process multiple elements within short timeframes. This heightened awareness creates a sensation of expanded time during brief moments.
This level of presence and skill development represents what the researchers call a “eudaimonic transition,” where pleasure comes not just from temporary thrills but from accomplishment, personal growth, and skilled performance.
“We heard stories of financial, mental, and physical sacrifice, but overwhelmingly, participants reported experiencing significant personal growth and fulfillment,” says Makkar.
However, sustaining these alternative careers comes with significant challenges. The researchers identified several “career demands” that participants struggled with, including:
- Chronotopic mobility – Being forced to constantly relocate following seasonal work, which strains relationships and creates instability.
- Compensatory prosumption – Having to balance teaching others (to earn money) with pursuing their own enjoyment of the activity.
- Economic disincentives – Dealing with low pay, precarious employment, and financial insecurity.
Many participants described a community that helps offset these challenges: a network of like-minded individuals who share resources and provide social support. One instructor explained the contrast between normal social boundaries and the snowsports community, noting how someone would never approach a stranger in a pub asking for accommodation, but in ski communities, meeting someone on a chairlift could naturally lead to offers of housing.
Why Some Return to Conventional Jobs
Despite this community support, the researchers found that many people eventually exit these passion-fueled careers due to what they term “disintegrative triggers.” Financial pressures, the strain of constant mobility (what they call the “tyranny of liquidity”), and reaching a plateau in skill development all contributed to decisions to return to more conventional work.
Beth, who left instructing after several years, described the precarious employment situation in which instructors are considered disposable. She mentioned contractual issues, such as employment being promised starting in December, but actual work and payment not materializing until late January, forcing people to deplete their savings during waiting periods.
What happens after people leave these alternative careers varies. Some experience what the researchers call “experiential extinction,” where the passion that once drove them disappears entirely. Others find ways to maintain connection through what’s termed “experiential migration,” transferring their pursuit of meaning to other activities or finding ways to continue part-time.
Rather than seeing work and pleasure as opposites, these eudaimonic consumption careers represent an attempt to integrate them, to make one’s passion the center of both economic and personal life.
“For employees, there’s never been a better time to demand flexibility or consider dumping nine-to-five roles for careers that are more meaningful,” says Makkar.
Traditional careers offer stability while eudaimonic ones offer meaning, but both exact their own unique costs. One path isn’t better than another; understanding both allows us to navigate our own choices more clearly. What would you be willing to sacrifice for meaning? What comforts could you surrender for freedom? These aren’t just questions for ski bums—they’re questions for anyone who’s ever felt trapped by success.
Source : https://studyfinds.org/choosing-passion-over-paychecks/