Working Towards Our Purpose

Do you ever feel like you're on autopilot? Just going through the motions of life with little control over how things are going? In this episode, we explore this feeling of being on autopilot and what to do to get unstuck. Drawing from both my personal experiences and the inspiring story of musician Petey USA's journey from dead-end jobs to successful music career, we examine the power of micro decisions. And how to use them to reclaim ownership over your life and calm your nervous system. Listen in as I share practical strategies and relatable anecdotes on breaking free from feeling stuck on autopilot.

FREE GUIDE: Soften Your Inner Critic in 7 Days: A Guide to Stop Getting In Your Own Way

📍 Timestamps:
00:00 - Check In
01:41 - Living on Autopilot?
02:59 - Petey's One Simple Change
05:04 - The Power of one Decision
06:30 - Micro Decisions
08:31 - Calming Your Nervous System
09:29 - Playfulness and Personal Growth
10:27 - Applying Micro Decisions in My Life
13:21 - Why Any Decision Is Better Than None
14:05 - Letting Life Happen to You
15:15 - What’s Your Next Micro Decision?
16:02 - Softening Your Inner Critic

 💡Key Takeaways
In this episode you'll learn:
  • How to get out of autopilot 
  • Learn what Petey did to completely change his life
  • Discover the impact of micro decisions
  • Taking ownership of your daily actions and choices
  • Making no decision is a decision 
  • Realize that breaking free from autopilot starts with even the smallest, easiest choice
  • Calming your nervous system first

 🚀 Start Here If You’re New
1. Overcoming Imposter Syndrome: How to Trust Your Success as a High-Achiever | EP 45
2. Overcoming Others' Expectations: 3 Stages to Living an Authentic Life | EP 48
3. Should You Quit Your Job? How to Know When it’s Time for a Career Pivot | EP 39

 👥How To Connect
Workingtowardsourpurpose.com
Watch on YouTube
Substack
Instagram
LinkedIn
WTOP Merch

What is Working Towards Our Purpose?

What if the problem isn’t your job, but the version of yourself you had to become to succeed in it? Corporate jobs don’t trap us because they’re evil. They trap us because they slowly teach us to disconnect from ourselves. If you're in corporate America and your life looks successful on paper but feels empty in practice, you’re not alone.

This podcast is a space for the quiet questions you don’t say out loud at work. We explore the inner side of change: the fear of starting over, self-sabotage, the trap of external expectations, imposter syndrome, and the unsettling moment when you realize someone else’s definition of success isn't enough for you.

This isn’t about quitting your job overnight or chasing money, but asking what feels right for you and finding clarity before making your next move. We deliver actionable strategies for complex career transitions. From managing ADHD-related overwhelm at work to overcoming the disconnect of the corporate grind.

You’re not broken. You’ve just outgrown the life you built.

New episodes weekly.

Hello, and welcome to episode 96 of Working towards

our purpose. Today's episode, we are going to talk about small

decisions that can pull you out of autopilot. But before we get

into that, we're going to slow down, take a second to just check in with

ourselves.

All right. How you feeling today? Hopefully you're

able to check in and see how you're feeling. For me,

feeling a little anxious today for some reason, not sure why, but

yesterday I. I was able to go out and enjoy this beautiful weather. It's been

really warm and nice over the weekend, and I was able

to relax a bit, which was nice. It's hard for me to

relax sometimes. I always feel like I need to be productive or do

something. But yesterday I got outside in

the park by me and read a book,

and it wasn't like a nonfiction productive

book. It was just like a fiction book, so that was cool.

I got to also just sit there and look at the trees,

and that's nice. I think it's helpful for me to get into nature to try

to relax a bit. So, yeah,

that's a good thing. But,

yeah. So today I want to talk about small

decisions that you can make, I guess,

or things that can help pull you out

of autopilot. And I guess what I mean by autopilot

is we did have an episode not that long ago, maybe a couple

months ago, called something about going through the

motions and disassociating at work. And

I think that autopilot is kind of similar to that.

It's like just going through the motions of life and not really

realizing where you're going or. And I don't want to talk

about numbing yourself and disassociating this episode, but more so

how to make a change and get out of that autopilot feeling.

So perhaps if you're in a job or something where

you feel like you don't want to be and you're just going

through the actions of the day and doing what's asked

of you, but sort of feel disconnected from yourself and

disconnected from what it is that you want to be doing.

Maybe this episode's for you, but. So this idea came to me

from a podcast that I listen to from this

artist, Petey, who is a

indie rock musician. And he's also like, I

guess, a TikTok personality. He's kind of a comedian. Makes

these short skits of him being all the characters.

Maybe you've seen him, but he was talking to Rainn Wilson,

who is Dwight, but

Rainn Wilson's his real name. And he has a

podcast called Soul Boom. And he kind of just talks about

spirituality and life and all that kind of stuff.

I listen to it every now and then. It's a decent podcast for me.

But anyways, he was talking to Petey and Petey was kind

of telling his life story and kind of describing being

like in this autopilot phase of his life where pretty much all through his

20s he just worked dead end jobs that he didn't like

and wasn't happy with his life

and was just kind of doing all these things because

he had to and

was just talking about like being really stuck and unhappy. And

Rain was basically like, well, what changed? Because now you're like

a successful musician, tours, is on a major record label,

has a pretty good life it seems. So what happened and

what changed? And he

kind of boiled it down to a small

decision which I think was super interesting. So he was saying at the time

he was living in California,

I just thought this was really interesting and worth sharing. So that's kind of why

I'm reiterating it. Um, but basically he was driving like

over an hour to work each day and in like LA traffic

and working this job and like I think he said the mail room just

like kind of a job that he didn't care about, but

it was a job that he could do because they didn't really ask that much

of him and he wasn't really good at having jobs. So it was like

a job that worked for his attention span. And

he was realized that he.

Well, I guess what caused him to want to make a change was like,

I think realizing that he wanted to be with this girl and he thought his

life was a mess so he had to get his life together, which maybe is

not the most important part, but the important part I thought was that

he decided that he had to make a change. And he realized that

he was ruining his days every morning by driving to work

because he would put the directions on his phone and use

the Waze app and try to get to work as fast

as possible through this horrific traffic and

over hour commute. And by the time he got to work he

was already extremely stressed out and angry and

feeling like he was late and this and that. And he realized that his drive

to work was just one highway, like one straight drive.

But the phone would always tell you to get off and

avoid these five minutes of traffic here and whatever it does

to try to get you there quicker. And he realized that if he just

accepted that it would take him 20 minutes longer to get to work. Then

he could just put his phone down and not be staring at his phone and

not endangering his life by going to work every morning and

being completely frantic by the time he got there.

So his decision to not look at his phone and just enjoy the

ride and accept that it was going to be an hour and a half

long and that was the end of it completely

changed his life. And it made him feel like he had some

ownership over his life, and it made him start to make

more decisions about how else can I change my life? And

another thing he said, and he called these micro

decisions, which I think is great, because it's nothing like crazy.

You don't need that much motivation or

energy to make these decisions. It's just like.

I mean, that one, the driving is kind of almost just like, acceptance of your

situation. But another thing that he also

decided to do was that he said he lived by this hill, and

he grew up in the Midwest Chicago area, and it

was super flat, and he always wanted to live by mountains. And. And he said

he lived by this really cool hill. And he's like, you know what? Every day

I'm going to wake up, and as I'm going to my car to work, I'm

going to say, that's a cool hill. So between

those two things, he kind of took some ownership back over in his life, and

then he decided to start chasing music

more and all that sort of stuff. But

he didn't really change much. He didn't have to quit his job. He didn't have

to, like, make some sort of crazy decision. And

maybe your life calls for that at some points. But also, I think it's, like,

super empowering to think about what small change can you

make to give yourself some ownership that can kind of help

pull you out of that autopilot. Because, I mean, I think

we can kind of all relate to that traffic situation. Like, how many times have

you gone somewhere and you're trying to get there? For some reason,

you give yourself the exact amount of time to get there. So then you get

on the road and you're like, oh, man, there's an accident. I got to get

off here. I got to. You know, you're making yourself, like,

go crazy because you're trying to get there on time, and

for what? Like, it doesn't. Does it matter that you're 10 minutes late? Probably

not. Or just leave 10 minutes early. Like, I don't know.

It's just these, like, little simple decisions that can help Us

like help keep yourself calm. And I think that's kind of

like the one of the biggest things for him. As I was listening

to his story. One of the biggest things for Petey was that he

was helping calm himself, helping calm his nervous system so he didn't

have to act out of fight or flight motor or

being your nervous system completely dysregulated. You're

helping to calm yourself down by just deciding it's going to take 20

minutes more. And at the end of the day, that was a great

decision because the 20 minutes he never missed. But

feeling calm when he got to work completely

like changed his perspective on his life situation. And so

basically he went from this place where he thought his life was terrible and

you know, he was at this dead end job or whatever, to being

content with his life and then starting to make decisions to

pursue his music and like pursue a career and like him kind of

blowing up on TikTok and stuff. The way he described it is he didn't plan

that out. He didn't try to be this TikTok personality.

He was just having fun with his friends and he found fun again

in his life and was kind of acting like a kid and just hanging out

with his friends in his backyard and made these videos because he thought it

was interesting and fun. And I think that kind

of came through especially when he gained his

popularity during the pandemic. There's just this honestness to

it, you know, and that's sort of what

connected. And it wasn't something that he planned out, it was just him trying

to like make good decisions in his life. And,

and yeah, how can we bring that back to our own life? Like, how can

you think about your own situation? And maybe if

you're unhappy with something, like what is one tiny change that you

can do? Because it doesn't feel like that much, does it? Doesn't feel that

hard to do, but it is giving yourself some ownership back

into your own life. So then thinking about

all this, I was kind of thinking about my own life and my own examples

and I was like, have I ever done this in my life? Have I ever

kind of made change that way in these little micro decisions?

And I think, well, if I think back

to when I was first trying to get out of my corporate job,

my initial thought was like, I need to be an entrepreneur, I need to have

a business, I need to run my own business and

that will be the solution. So I didn't know how to

do any of that. And I think the first micro decision that I

made was starting an Instagram for this business that I had.

And I kind of hid behind this name, Pleasant Podcast. And I was like,

okay, this is my business. I'm just going to start an Instagram and see if

I can get clients. And at the time, that worked

because Instagram was a very different place and I was able to

reach out to some people and find clients to edit

podcasts. And it didn't seem

overwhelming because it was just like, oh, it takes five seconds to make an

Instagram. Just make one and then start messaging people.

So that kind of seemed like a micro decision. And then I took it to

the extreme and made a website and learned how to do all this

sort of different type of stuff and content marketing and like, all

website design and like, all this. Did I say that already? All this

sort of different type of stuff. And then I went to, like, a podcast studio,

and then, like, I kind of ran with it at that point.

But it started with just making an Instagram, and I think

maybe that's. Maybe that's important to notice. Another

kind of change in my life that maybe started with, again,

a micro change or a micro decision

is for me, going to open mic nights. I think I knew that I wanted

to play my music and perform my music

and do something more with my music, but playing at an open

mic night seemed intimidating. And I went

and sat at open mic nights for a while

before my friend PJ kind of forced me to do it because he knew

why I was there. But I just attended. I just went and

watched. And that was easy because it's just like you go to a cafe, you

hang out for a couple hours, you go home. So that was sort of like

a micro decision. I also had friends to help me because they were

performing, so I was supporting them. So that made it easier for me to go.

It wasn't like I was going by myself, but there were these kind of

small decisions for myself that

helped move the

scope of my trajectory,

kind of just moving the target in the vague direction

of where I want to go and just making that one little decision.

And now I'm playing my own stuff every week, and I have

a collection of songs, more than 10 songs that I can play and I've memorized.

And that's something that I never thought of doing or never thought that I could

do. So I think these little

micro decisions are so interesting, and I think at the end of the day, they're

not necessarily like, it's not about

making the right little micro decision.

It's more so actually making a decision. Because I

think that a lot of us, if I'm speaking about my old

self, me, I was lost in the past

because of the lack of decisions that I was making. And I wasn't making

any decisions. And this is what Petey talked about too. Like he was

just avoiding making a decision for so long. And you kind of

just let your life happen to you. And I think that

that's the biggest definition of what a life on

autopilot is, is that you're not making any decisions and you're just letting

life happen to you based off of where you are

and you're letting everybody else make decisions for you. And

especially for me, going to college, thinking about where I was going after high

school, none of those decisions were mine. I was just kind of

in the place, right place, right time to go to engineering school. So that's where

I ended up. And

I don't say that in a regretful way, but I say that

in more of a self awareness way that the. Yeah, I

wasn't making any decisions for myself out of fear, out

of no confidence, out of

feeling bad for myself, whatever it was, I just wasn't making any

decisions. So that's what's great about these micro decisions, because

it's like now you're actually making a decision for yourself

instead of the decision to not make a decision.

And when you make your own decisions, you can get closer to

that life that you desire, that you want.

And yeah, again, just the beauty of micro decisions is they're not that they shouldn't

be hard, they're not that hard to do.

They kind of fall in with where your life's at. But

what makes it different is that you're making the decision.

So, yeah, I thought that listening to Petey talk about his

life just really made me want to think about

that more and to share that message

and yeah, also to challenge you. Maybe if you're listening and

you're feeling sort of on autopilot in your life, is there a micro

decision that you can make right now? And

yeah, that's kind of it. So maybe this is a bit

shorter of an episode, but I did want to share that message. Thanks

to Petey and Rainn Wilson for that. And yeah, if you're struggling

with your inner critic, as always, I have a free seven day guide to help

you soften your inner critic. Link is in the show notes. Thank

you for listening, as always, and I hope you have a

great rest of your week and I'll see you on another episode real soon. Take

care.