[About Me] Why I Quit My Corporate Job and Started Creating Art
Introduction
As a way of introducing myself, I’d like to write about
“why I left my corporate job and started creating art.”
I’m currently 48 years old,
and the first time I made something that could be called “art-like” was at 43.
That’s extremely late.
It wasn’t born from an excited feeling of
“I want to do this!”
Instead, it started as something more urgent—almost like I was being pushed into it:
“I can’t hold myself together unless I release what’s inside me through expression.”
And so, I began.
I Was Working Hard, But I Was on the Wrong Track
After graduating from university, I worked as a company employee for over 20 years.
I believe that life is about doing what you want to do,
so I worked extremely hard to turn what I wanted into my job.
And finally, by the time I turned 30,
I had a job where I was satisfied with the work itself, the workplace environment, relationships, and salary.
But as I approached 40, I clearly realized something:
“I chose the wrong track.”
It was a devastating shock.
Because I had worked myself to the bone to get there.
And I had finally reached what I thought was the place I had been aiming for.
In reality, though, I had been hearing a faint voice for more than five years before I clearly recognized it.
But at that time, given the social expectations in Japan,
I believed that another career change was absolutely impossible.
I also felt guilty toward my parents, who had already worried about me so much.
And I was also conscious of my age in terms of having children.
So I pretended not to hear that voice, and continued living.
Still, that voice gradually grew stronger.
In order to explore the possibility of “what if,”
I began challenging myself more than ever before—both in work and in my personal life.
Anything that even slightly felt like “I want to try this,” I went for it.
But as I kept trying things, I ended up thinking:
“Not this… not this either… still not this… none of this…”
I fell into despair, wondering what on earth I actually was looking for.
Maybe I was just being greedy, always wanting something I didn’t have.
Maybe I was simply suffering from a kind of endless dissatisfaction.
I thought about that often.
But no matter how much I thought, the only answer I could reach was:
“This is not it.”
No matter what I did, I couldn’t shake the sense of lack inside me.
Eventually, I had no choice but to accept it:
“I chose the wrong track.”
But even after admitting that, I still didn’t know:
If so, what is the right track for me?
Searching for My Track — What I Finally Found
“If I don’t know, then I have to move.”
So I kept moving, again and again.
I dragged myself forward through life.
It was exhausting.
But within all of that, there was one thing I became completely absorbed in:
Art.
There was something that rose from within me that made me feel I had no choice but to do it.
When I was creating, I would fall into an intense state of immersion—
a feeling where I couldn’t even stop myself.
I could clearly feel that it was different from everything else.
But I convinced myself:
“This is just a hobby.”
Because I believed becoming an artist was one of the hardest things in the world.
And above all, I was raised by “ordinary” parents who taught me that being ordinary is best.
So becoming an artist was something I could not even consider seriously.
And so I kept running away. Over and over.
But no matter how much I tried to escape,
it felt as if my whole body was gently lifted up,
and then firmly pressed back down onto the ground:
“This is where you belong. Stop resisting.”
Completely exhausted, I finally gave in.
And then I realized:
“There is no such thing as a track.”
“What I truly wanted was never something that had a fixed path in the first place.”
After a long, long detour filled with confusion and exhaustion,
I finally came to recognize it:
What I truly want is to express myself through art.
And I was finally able to give myself permission to acknowledge that.
Why It Has to Be Art
I have always loved art.
But I always saw myself only as a viewer—
I never once imagined becoming someone who creates it.
Looking back, I think I had been unconsciously avoiding it all along.
Because I believed that making a living as an artist is one of the hardest things in the world.
But the more I created art,
the more I felt something inside me connecting—like dots from my childhood experiences, interests, and curiosities were naturally linking together.
It was a feeling I had never experienced before.
I finally realized:
“This is the place I’ve been searching for.”
When I first started seriously thinking about my career during job hunting,
I asked myself:
“What do I truly want to do?”
Since then, I have questioned it endlessly—through jobs, through career changes, through effort after effort.
And the answer was here all along.
From that point on, I began living in deep dialogue with myself and my expression.
That said, I am still simply making art.
I do not yet have any achievements that would allow me to call myself an “artist.”
For the past three years, I have been exploring in depth:
What do I actually want to express?
And how do I want to express it?
After continuously experimenting and diving deep,
I finally feel that I have reached a minimum foundation within myself.
So I decided it was time to step outside and begin writing this blog.
Because my creative process is somewhat unconventional,
I honestly still don’t know how I will ever turn my work into income, and that makes me anxious.
But I decided that first, I want people to get to know me.
I would like to write slowly about my works, my life so far,
and various other things as well.
Thank you for reading.
June 14, 2026
mienaimonotachi
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