Why I Left My Office Job : The Blockchain Ecosystem Will Empower A Better, Stronger, More Collaborative Future

in #freedom7 years ago (edited)

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Creative Seeking Empowerment…


For years, I have been looking for an innovative, open and collaborative community. Last summer, I stumbled into Steemit. I never imagined that exactly 12 months later I would be making an incredibly challenging decision to pivot away from a promising career as an architect in order to embrace a new technological frontier.

I believe that the momentum of decentralized platforms like Steemit will kickstart a new and open-sourced age of making, sharing and building. This post details a bit of my own personal quest and hope for the blockchain ecosystem to become a powerful resource for creatives and communities all over the globe.

Beginnings as an Artist in Berlin


For me, the quest for a collaborative commons began in Berlin, Germany.

In 2011, I graduated from architecture school and immediately moved to Berlin alongside three other designers. The four of us bought one-way tickets. We packed pens, pencils, paper and sketch books. We rented a tiny studio space out of a reclaimed East German prison complex (hey, it was cheap!) and immediately got to work. We sought to make and imagine architecture through art.

Our collective work was never just about the final - framed - product. We pushed ourselves to communicate with one another through pen and paper, using our individual styles as a way of group problem solving. This design-method expanded. We frequently collaborated with a community of Berlin creatives as we realized the potential to make work on paper, on the wall, sculpture and into architecture.

We were successful at exhibitions. @hitheryon had dozens of them over the course of three years. People loved seeing and learning about the process of our bauhaus-ian craft. We had our first solo show in December of 2011. Later in 2012 we were featured in a segment on Arte TV. In the Summer of 2014 we were part of an incredible group exhibition at Den Frie Museum of Contemporary Art in Copenhagen. But, for all the good attention we received, we did poorly when it came to selling our work. We sold a number of our drawings, but it was never enough to support the four of us. People were always more enthralled by the process of our work than they were willing to purchase the final product. For a typical gallery, the product was always the ultimate point. There was so much pressure on that final piece to sell. This “all or nothing” approach deeply hurt our practice.

The four of us craved a venue that could attribute value to our process (as well as our final product) but never found it. Our experiment suffered and eventually, we left Berlin.

A Retreat to the Traditional Workplace


I left Berlin and moved back to the states. Though I worked more traditional "9-5" jobs, I did bring an energy and passion for collaboration back with me. Architecture (especially in New York City) had too much ego and not enough context. I wanted to learn more about the canvas beyond the footprint of a single building. This new scope of pushed me into the world of urban design and city planning. To some, that sounds like even more ego! But to me it felt like a larger scale of our collaborative Hither Yon drawings.

For the last few years I’ve worked in an architecture and urban design firm in New York City. I’ve been incredibly lucky to have worked on projects all over the world and have been even more fortunate to see the fruits of my labor manifest themselves in the shapes of buildings, city-blocks and streetscapes.

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  • Giralda Avenue Streetscape, Florida. Through this design, pen and paper became stone and mortar. I spent thousands of hours working on this paving pattern and was incredibly lucky to watch it become real. (Still under construction!)

Tools of the “9-5” Trade


Still though, the processes of professional practice were deeply traditional. An architecture firm today isn’t so different from an architecture firm 100 years ago. The tools might look different. But a drafting desk is functionally the same as AutoCAD (a digital drawing software) … all we’ve done is swap a pencil for a cursor. Computer drawing is an imitation game. Software does it’s best to imitate how an architect draws a line from point A to B.

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Over the last few years I witnessed firms grow increasingly dependent on employees who were good at software, and not necessarily those who were good at design. I saw several friends and colleagues fired for not keeping pace with the software surrounding them. Today, I know the software very well… but… 10 years from now? Not a chance. The software-centric corporate ladder felt like a race that was impossible to win. After a few years in my office I realized that I was beginning to focus more on learning the tools and less on the quality of design.

Discovering The Melting Pot of Steemit


I was anxious for something different. I started looking for new resources that might empower my practice. I wanted a venue for something visual, communicative and adaptable. I had been through the online mill of social media and had exhausted so many options. It was really like a Goldilocks scenario... nothing fit. Twitter was too fleeting, Tumblr felt invisible, Instagram felt fake, and Facebook became increasing isolating. All of them felt as if I was working the same chaotic ladder-style game.

Last summer, I stumbled into the Steemit ecosystem completely by chance. “The Internet’s Small Town” the landing page beamed. I began to flip through the pages and found a community of artists, designers, engineers, photographers, writers, travelers and entrepreneurs. It felt like a melting pot glowing with genuine conversation and excitement. I was completely hooked. I joined the blockchain under the moniker “lgm-1” (just over 1 year ago now!) Steemit felt empowering. And it jolted something inside me that I hadn’t felt since drawing collaboratively among four friends in a Berlin studio several years earlier.

Empowering Creative Process


Finally, a venue to value process! This was the illusive thing I was looking for since the Berlin days. Steemit isn’t a polished art gallery or a quiet museum… it’s more like a communal work desk. It’s a place where you can share raw thinking and receive constructive and honest feedback.

Sketchbooks, bar napkins, eraser residue, smudges, study models, late nights, early mornings, crumpled-up paper and globs of paint... The creative “process” can be where the best stories are hiding. It’s where the artist’s rigor, passion and craftsmanship are brought to a boil. The “final” piece is just a small window into a much bigger landscape. With Steemit, creatives are finding a platform to share the stories beyond the frame.

A Collaborative Commons with @sndbox


Today, it’s time to take a risk. Steemit is an exciting piece of what some call the “collaborative commons”… it’s a disruptive pivot in the great social media experiment. The STEEM ecosystem is cultivating a new environment to explore the impact of a global network on local communities.

I left my job to pursue the collaborative commons through @sndbox. An incubator project built on the STEEM blockchain. I’m excited to push forward in this new endeavor alongside my Berliner brother @hansikhouse. Together, we're going to do many more projects like STEEM Park and empower other community oriented creatives around the globe.

The blockchain ecosystem will kickstart a new and open-sourced age of making, sharing and building. From here on, I'll be working hard to bring this new age just a few steps closer. STEEM on!


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I can feel the fear, in my throat, when I have to make a decision this big..
Not easy to leave behind so much security, for a life of passion. But I do enjoy my life more; and living day to day, is an adventure, in comparison to the "grind".
I end up making lots of new friends on steemit, because most of the folks I used to work with, or people I know, can't be bothered to join steemit and learn how it works.
They think about it, but they are afraid..

an adventure, in comparison to the "grind".

Amen to that. Here's to more adventures @surfyogi, thanks so much for thoughtful reply and support!

GREAT award winning post! Follow me @lurehound

i am yet to see the videos but got a quick question in mind does it not let you have any fear in mind of being free away from a fixed hour job ??

Absolutely! Fear is something that can paralyze you, but it can also force you to innovate.

I'm a believe that the traditional 9-5 workplace carries deep (out-of-date) flaws and that blockchain resources will empower a more organic type workplace. Here's hoping for an innovative tomorrow!

To be honest this question just kept revolving in my Head but had not asked anyone since its kinda awkward i guess but thank you so much for replying me means a lot,i am kind of same thoughts but that fear just stops me

Of course :)

All we can hope for... is to discover a passion for something. If you discover that, work hard to find ways of pursuing it (sustainably). Sometimes that means moving away from a fixed hour job, other times it means moving into a fixed hour job.

Resources like Steemit are providing a new means to pursue things that you're passionate about. That's an exciting thing to witness.

thank you so much , now i too kinda feel that it all up to us how we see our self and what we are comfortable with its the passion which leads to our destination

Omg, drawing one of those paintings takes a lot of time!
Yeah, I have the same feeling about the future of the blockchain. Let's hope for better and work hard.

Hours and hours! (If Steemit existed back then, I'd be blogging like wild.) Thanks for your comment and support. Here's to something better!

I couldn't agree more the Blockchain Ecosystem will empower a better future! This is definitely worth an upvote and a resteem :)

Thanks for the support Steem 'boss! ;)

I've always found that taking a calculated risk is by far the right decision for personal fulfillment and defining your path. Glad you made the big leap and are charging ahead as an entrepreneur. Big things in the future.

Big leaps are abound this year. Thank you for the kind words of support and encouragement my friend. Let's charge ahead into something exciting together. Onwards and upwards!

Some day I want to get away from working my corporate job. Even though it pays pretty well, I get two good bonuses per year and the benefits are great, I feel like I die a little bit each day that I spend there sitting at a desk under fluorescent lights in a room tomb with no windows. I spend very little time designing and it seems I have to spend more and more time playing the game of corporate politics with management who has no idea what's going on in their own dept. They're too busy with all the cross function team activities they create, special initiatives which never lead anywhere, and all the other dog and pony show crap that takes away from us doing what we're actually supposed to do (design and build machinery). But enough ranting about my corporate hell...

I remember back in the early 2000's when AutoCAD was the software of choice for engineers and it was less user-friendly back then. I'm a mechanical designer and I usually use Solidworks to design machinery. It's amazing to me that it all used to be by pencil and paper on a drafting board.

That's inspiring to me to see others who wanted more than to work under someone else for their whole lives and have gone out on their own to create their own destiny. My hat is off to you.

Thank you so much for your thoughtful reply and support! Clearly, there's a serious percentage of people within the corporate workplace who feel the same way. So many are paralyzed (with the politics) and ripe for something disruptive. Exciting times ahead. Thank you again @cryptokeepr.

cheers @voronoi, I love this story and learning more about the inside of your creative interests and pursuits . Hearty congratulations for taking the leap and following where your heart has taken you!

Steemit isn’t a polished art gallery or a quiet museum… it’s more like a communal work desk.

So feeling this- though I imagine your part of the desk is a lot tidier than mine.
Resteeming because it is awesome.

It's been such an awesome place to explore and experiment! It's only been a year... and you're right, my desk is a little too tidy. Here's hoping for a little more mess over the year to come. Thanks as always for your support @opheliafu :)

Good one @voronoi, I like it when people move out of their 'supposed comfort zones' and engage in doing good.

It's good to have some skin in the game my friend! Let's engage and empower some good together :)

Your work is amazing! I especially like the Giralda Avenue Streetscape. I wish I had that design on my back patio. Your right, Steemit has great potential and we need Steemians like you to help us overcome obstacles and move forward. It is kind of
funny, right before I read your post I was thinking, "What if I had the guts to quit my job and start working on a crypto project?"

Hey thanks @bbrewer! Likewise I wish Giralda was just around the corner ;)

Glad it resonated with you! Who knows where we'll be a year from now.

That is one of the greatest things about life. Sometimes we get to look back and marvel about how far we have come.

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