The author said she was tired of a career that she no longer enjoyed, so she took a chance on something new.

Courtesy of Bea Meitiner.

At 38, I gave myself one year and £15,000 (nearly $20,000 USD at the time) to completely change my life. I told myself that if it didn't work, I'd go back to the life I had spent so long trying to leave.At the time, I was a VP of Sales for a global wholesale business. I had spent the last 12 painstaking years working my way up the ladder, giving up evenings and weekends to pursue the next promotion. On paper, it looked like I was succeeding, but in reality, every rung broke my spirit a little more.At the same time, my marriage was ending, and everything that once felt stable suddenly didn't. For the first time in years, I felt lost. I was at a crossroads of what I thought I should do and what I wanted to do.I gave myself a deadline and a financial limitWhen my house sold, I made a decision that felt both freeing and terrifying in equal measures. Instead of putting that money toward long-term security, I used part of it to "get my business going," which, if I'm being honest, turned into a travel fund.I set myself a boundary: £15,000 (nearly $20,000 USD at the time) and 1 year. If my travel blog couldn't sustain me before the money ran out, I would return to the rat race.At that point, my blog was only bringing in around £50 (around $68 USD) on a good month. Not nearly enough to support me. I remember refreshing my earnings dashboard, knowing the number wouldn't change. It wasn't a business. It was an idea.The deadline may have given me focus, but it also put pressure on me.