
I once took two days off work, drove 4 hours through a freezing January, and paid for a hotel I couldn’t afford, all for a meeting that didn’t happen. That experience reminded me how important it is to take steps toward financial independence, even in uncertain times. What I didn’t realize at the time was that this moment would become a defining career turning point.
Restless and ready to move on. I had my sights on Minneapolis, Boston, or Seattle. Minneapolis felt like the first step, close enough to reach, far enough to mean something. I had a 9 am meeting lined up with a major firm. I walked in hopeful.
And then I waited.
The Moment that Tests You
The wait turned into an hour. I sat quietly, but eventually reminded the front desk that I was here for my interview. Another thirty minutes passed. Finally, the HR Director came out only to ask me to come back in the afternoon. I reluctantly said I could do that. I visited the local museum, had lunch, and came back at 3 pm as we had discussed, only to be told that the meeting would not take place. The principal I was supposed to meet with had a project issue, and the HR Director asked if I could come back tomorrow. I said I can’t stay. Is there anyone else I could meet with since I am here? The response is that there is no one else. And, little acknowledgment of the effort it took to get there. Sometimes the test isn’t the opportunity—it’s how you’re treated on the way to it. Research shows that first impressions shape workplace perception, and in that moment, I was seeing clearly what this environment valued
The Internal Shift
Disappointed and mad, I went back outside in the freezing temperatures and began the long ride home. After an hour of driving, my anger subsided. I felt clarity. I had always aspired to work there, but I began to believe there was a better place for me. That firm was not where I belonged. Alone, I spoke a quiet yet steady decision. I will never work at that firm. Looking back, that moment marked a quiet but powerful career turning point. Learning to trust your instincts isn’t always easy, but it often reveals what logic tries to explain away. In moments like this, focusing on small wins in life can help rebuild momentum and move you forward.
What Came Next
As this door closed, a bigger door opened. I decided to make the move I ultimately wanted. I wanted to live on the coast and work for a top-tier design firm. These dreams combined led me to opportunities out west. What I found was a 20-year career with firms where I felt valued, respected, challenged, and seen. “Looking back, the right doors opened because I was willing to walk away from the wrong ones.”
The Leadership Lesson
I think of that time often, and today I never forget that every person who walks in has made some tradeoff or sacrifice to be there. Time is something we never get back. Giving someone your time is a form of respect, and when it is not honored, people feel it. Small moments leave lasting impressions. Over time, how you treat people becomes your legacy, far more than titles, awards, or a portfolio.
A Career Turning Point in Hindsight
Looking back, that missed meeting didn’t block my path; it defined it. It clarified what I would and would not accept, and it set a standard I’ve carried into every leadership role since.
Because Maya Angelou (among others) said it best: “People will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.”
And sometimes, the opportunities that don’t happen are the ones that shape you the most.
I didn’t get that job
I got something better:
Clarity on my values.
If you’re navigating your own turning point, learning how to reset your life without starting over can help you move forward with clarity.
This brings me to today’s Star Stunning realizations:
- Not every option deserves your energy: Pay attention to what it costs you to pursue it, and whether the exchange feels fair. If it doesn’t feel right, that is information gathered to inform your decisions—and part of building clarity in your next step.
- When people show you their culture, believe them early. Years later, I learned it wasn’t a one-off experience; it was a pattern. That clarity mattered.
- Redirection can come in unlikely places. It might be protection. What felt like rejection in the moment was actually steering me away from where I didn’t belong.
- In the right environment, you don’t have to prove your worth. If you constantly have to convince people of your value, it may not be about you; it may be about where you are.




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