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I was forty-three years old, working another seventy-hour week, when an older contractor pulled me aside at a supply house. We’d crossed paths on job sites for years, but never really talked beyond the usual weather and Red Sox complaints.
He was retiring that week after forty years in the trades. I made some crack about how nice it must be to finally relax. He looked at me for a long moment, then said something that changed how I thought about work forever.
“You know what nobody tells you?” he said. “Work will never tell you when you’ve done enough. Only you can decide that.”
At the time, I brushed it off. I had bills to pay, a business to run, guys counting on me for paychecks. What did this old-timer know about my situation?
Turns out, he knew everything.
Work is a terrible judge of what’s enough
Here’s what I didn’t understand back then: work is like a stray dog you start feeding. It’ll keep coming back for more, and it’ll never tell you it’s full.
I spent twenty-two years running my electrical business. Every time I thought I’d reached a good balance, something would pull me back in. A big job opportunity. A problem with a supplier. An employee who quit without notice.
The business always had another emergency, another opportunity, another reason I needed to work late. And I kept saying yes because I thought that’s what you do. You push harder. You sacrifice more. You prove you’re serious.
But work never once said, “Hey, that’s enough. Go home to your family.”
It took me way too long to realize that work can’t make that call. It doesn’t know about your kid’s baseball game or your wife eating dinner alone again or the fact that you haven’t seen your friends in months.
Work only knows what work needs. And what work needs is always more.
Nobody else will protect your time
After that conversation at the supply house, I started paying attention to how I was spending my time. The results were embarrassing.
I was giving my best hours to work. My family got whatever was left, which usually wasn’t much. Donna had told me she felt like a single mother, and I’d gotten defensive. But she was right.
I kept telling myself I was doing it for them. Building something. Providing. All the stuff guys like me tell ourselves when we’re avoiding the truth.
The truth was simpler: I didn’t know how to say no to work.
A customer would call on a Saturday, and I’d answer. A job would run late, and I’d stay. Someone would need an emergency repair on a Sunday, and I’d go.
Meanwhile, my kids were growing up. My marriage was running on autopilot. I was turning into one of those guys who knows everything about his business and nothing about his family.
The thing is, nobody was forcing me to work those hours. My customers weren’t holding a gun to my head. My employees weren’t demanding I sacrifice my weekends.
I was doing it to myself. And until I figured that out, nothing was going to change.
Being needed isn’t the same as being important
This was a hard one for me to learn. When you run a business, you feel needed all the time. Phone’s always ringing. People are always asking questions. Problems need solving.
It feels important. It feels like you matter.
But here’s what I figured out: being needed at work and being important to the people you love are two different things.
Sure, my customers needed me to fix their electrical problems. But my kids needed a father who showed up. My wife needed a partner, not just a paycheck. My friends needed someone who actually returned their calls.
A customer once told me, “you’re just an electrician” when I couldn’t drop everything to fix his problem immediately. It stung. I carried that around for years, trying to prove I was more than that.
But you know what? He was right. To him, I was just an electrician. And that’s fine.
To my family, I was supposed to be everything else. Father. Husband. The guy who taught them to throw a baseball and showed up for birthday parties and was actually present at dinner instead of thinking about tomorrow’s job.
I spent so much time trying to be important to people who’d forget my name the minute the job was done that I almost lost the people who actually mattered.
The cost of saying yes to everything
Every yes to work was a no to something else. Took me twenty years to figure that out.
Yes to the emergency call on Saturday meant no to my kid’s game. Yes to staying late meant no to dinner with Donna. Yes to taking on that extra job meant no to the fishing trip with my brother.
I thought I was being responsible. I thought I was doing what a man does—work hard, provide, never complain.
What I was really doing was hiding. Work was easier than dealing with feelings, easier than being present, easier than figuring out who I was outside of my job.
And the business loved it. It rewarded me with more work, more responsibility, more reasons to stay busy. It never asked if I was happy. It never wondered if I was burning out. It just kept demanding more, and I kept giving it.
The guy at the supply house was right. Work will never tell you when you’ve done enough. It doesn’t have that capability. It’s not designed to care about your life outside of it.
Only you can make that call. Only you can decide what enough looks like.
Bottom line
I sold my business to my foreman when I retired. These days, I spend my time writing, fixing things around the house, and actually being present for the people I love.
Sometimes I run into guys who are where I was twenty years ago—working themselves into the ground, convinced they don’t have a choice.
I tell them what that old contractor told me: work will never tell you when you’ve done enough.
Because here’s what I know now—you can be good at your job without giving it your entire life. You can be successful without sacrificing everything else. You can work hard and still protect what matters.
But you have to decide what enough looks like. Nobody else will do it for you.














