Ten years into running my electrical business, I thought I had it all figured out. Good reputation, steady work, nice house in a decent neighborhood. I’d wake up at 5 AM, put on my work clothes like armor, and head out to whatever job site needed me. I was Tommy the electrician. The guy people called when they needed something fixed right.
But here’s the thing about building a life based on who you think you’re supposed to be—eventually, the foundation cracks.
It happened on a Saturday morning. Nothing special about it. I was sitting at the kitchen table with my coffee, looking out at the backyard I’d landscaped to impress people who never came over. Donna was reading in the living room. The house was quiet.
And suddenly, I knew. Really knew. Everything I’d built—the business, the house with the perfect lawn, the tough guy who never complained—I’d built it all for someone who didn’t exist anymore. Maybe never did.
When the person you’re pretending to be gets too heavy to carry
You know how it starts. Your old man tells you what a man is supposed to be. Strong. Silent. Provider. Never show weakness, never ask for help, sure as hell never admit you’re scared or lost or just tired.
So you build yourself around that blueprint. You become the guy who works harder than everyone else. You buy the right truck, the right house, accumulate the right amount of respect from the right people. You think if you just get good enough at playing the part, eventually you’ll become it for real.
I spent thirty years perfecting my performance. Could talk shop with any contractor, knew every supplier in town by name, had opinions about football teams I didn’t actually watch. I was so good at being who I thought I should be that I forgot there was ever another option.
The problem with wearing a mask that long? Your actual face starts to feel like the disguise.
After I retired, the mask started slipping. Without a job site to report to, without problems to solve and crews to manage, I didn’t know what to do with myself. Donna bought me a journal as a joke—said maybe I could write down all the things I never talked about.
Turns out she was onto something.
The life you build when you’re not paying attention
Here’s what nobody tells you about living on autopilot: you can go decades without realizing you’re doing it.
I thought I was making choices. House in the suburbs? Made sense—good investment, nice neighborhood. Working seventy-hour weeks? That’s what it takes to build a business. Never talking about what was actually going on in my head? That’s just how men in my family operated.
But looking back, I wasn’t choosing anything. I was following a script someone else wrote.
The house? I bought it because successful people had houses like that. Never mind that Donna and I rattled around in all that space, or that I spent every weekend maintaining a lawn I didn’t care about for neighbors I barely knew.
The business? Sure, I was good at electrical work. But I turned it into my entire identity because that felt safer than figuring out who I actually was. If I was working, I was useful. If I was useful, I mattered.
And the strong, silent type routine? That wasn’t strength. That was fear dressed up in work boots.
What happens when you finally stop running
Retirement forced me to stop moving long enough to look around. And what I saw shook me.
I’d built a life that looked right from the outside but felt like wearing someone else’s clothes. Everything fit fine, but nothing was actually mine.
The first few months after I retired were rough. Without a toolbelt on, I didn’t know who I was. I’d walk into the garage, look at all my tools hanging there perfectly organized, and feel like a ghost haunting someone else’s life.
Donna was patient with me. She’d lived with my persona so long, she’d almost forgotten there was a real person under there too. But she remembered enough to wait him out.
Slowly, I started noticing things. Like how I’d never actually liked watching sports—I just thought I was supposed to. Or how I’d spent years hiding the fact that I read books, real books, because that didn’t fit the image. Or how exhausting it was to constantly edit myself to match what I thought people expected.
The journal helped. Writing things down, even badly, made them real in a way that thinking never did. Page by page, I started excavating the person buried under four decades of pretending.
Building something real from the wreckage
You can’t just tear down the fake life and expect the real one to magically appear. Doesn’t work like that. You have to build it, same as anything else. But this time, you build it true.
I started small. Admitted to Donna that I actually hated football. She laughed and said she’d known for years—apparently, I’d been falling asleep during games since the ’90s.
I stopped pretending to care about things that didn’t matter to me. Let the lawn go a little wild. Traded the truck for something smaller that made more sense. Started saying “I don’t know” when I didn’t know something, instead of faking my way through.
The biggest change? I started talking. Really talking. Not just about work or weather or whatever safe topic kept things surface-level. But about the actual stuff going on inside my head.
That was terrifying at first. Sixty years of conditioning told me that real men don’t do that. But you know what? That conditioning was written by men who probably died with everything locked inside them. I didn’t want to be another one.
Before I go
That Saturday morning over coffee, when I realized I’d built my whole life for someone who didn’t exist anymore—that wasn’t the end of something. It was the beginning.
Sure, it’s unsettling to realize you’ve been living as your own cover story. But it’s also liberating. Because once you know the life you built isn’t real, you can start building one that is.
These days, I’m still figuring things out. Still catch myself slipping into the old persona sometimes, especially around other guys my age. But I’m getting better at catching it, setting it down, being the actual person instead of the performance.
The house is smaller now. The lawn’s a mess. I write more than I fix things. And for the first time in my adult life, the person living inside me actually matches the life built around him.
Turns out that’s worth more than any career, any house, any perfectly maintained persona ever was.














