All of those DWYL practitioners frame the search abstractly. They tell us to look to our childhood joys, continuing interests, things we like to do whether we get paid or not, and then, you know, just build a career out of them. Like a magic trick. They leave a huge gulf between the inventory and the how-to.
Roadtrip Nation and Roadmap are the bridge. They interview hundreds of real-life work explorers and help us see how to follow our noses incrementally. None of their "leaders," as the interviewees are called, set out to do the exact work they're doing now. Their work lives, skills, and directions continually evolve. They stop and start, readjusting, learning new skills, following the next opportunity that shows itself. They listen to their guts. They trust the feeling that something isn't right, and they trust that they'll figure it out when the next step is uncharted.
Most importantly, they work their asses off. None of the leaders sit around navel-gazing, waiting for light to stream from the heavens and show them the way. They do stuff, constantly. They look for the next tiny step, as tiny as making one phone call, writing one paragraph, drawing one picture, playing one song. They act. Reading and learning and musing are important, but they're wary of dwelling too long. They connect with the next, and the next, and the next action.
What is the smallest action you could take, right now? Got one? Stop reading, then, go do, and repeat.

