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Being a comedian myself, I've seen this occur repeatedly to many comedy careers but not quite at the same level. Many comedians experience the disappointment of not getting a gig, a show or a week's booking. It all hurts. Some comics make it to a prominent level in show business at a young age and never regain that status. Careers can take a roller coaster path of perpetually heading down. Comedians reaching retirement age wince as they realize how "old" they have grown in comedy clubs. A cut in pay usually triggers this realization. Again, it all hurts.
When I listened to Jay reflecting on how many awesome and famous people he had met and engaged with, I realized how short my list of accomplishments was in comparison. I was aghast that he was retiring and I am not even making a dent in such a huge arsenal of success.
And then I remembered. Life is a matter of choices. What Jay Leno doesn't have is my three beautiful children who are my own reason for living. When it came time to make a choice as a young woman between career ambitions and family, I chose the latter. I've never had any regrets. I am the richest person I know and not even NBC can take that away from me.
http://humorousspeakersbureau.com Sally Edwards is the president of The Humorous Speakers Bureau marketing corporate comedians and funny keynote motivational speakers.
http://sallyedwards.org - Laugh to Good Health
http://comedybysally.com - Clean Corporate Comedy

Great article Sally! You won that battle by FAR. Knowing your wonderful kids personally has driven your point home, but you also got to experience the thrill of making strangers laugh as well. Jay didn't get to experience the amazing growth of a Brendan, Steven or Christine. He had a stellar career, and still will - but YOU won the big game. Kudos!
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