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Billy HallowellMay 11, 2020 12:00:00 AM2 min read

The View' Host Was at the Top of Her Career — Here's Why She Quit and Left It All Behind

Paula Faris was at the height of her media career when she abruptly decided to leave it all behind.

Despite sweeping success as co-host of "The View" and co-anchor of "Good Morning America: Weekend Edition," Faris was burnt out, exhausted and on a quest to refocus on what truly mattered.

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"I was at the height of my career ... and I really felt like I was walking in my ... God-given calling," she recently told "The Billy Hallowell Podcast." "And I leaned in so hard to what we're told to lean into — to work and vocation ... that I burnt out."

Listen to Faris reveal why she walked away from her dream job:

 

Faris, author of the new book, "Called Out: Why I Traded Two Dream Jobs for a Life of True Calling," said her career was "soaring," but that her personal life was failing.

From her marriage to her health, nothing was where she wanted it to be. Faris, a longtime Christian, said she simply "didn't have an ease" in her spirit, and that she had become consumed by her job.

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"I knew that I had taken it to an unhealthy place," she said. "I had become addicted to what I did, addicted to the accolades ... accomplishment, and the high [of] the spotlight."

Faris added, "It became about what I was doing, not who I was doing it for."

Amid a flurry of chaos, the journalist faced a miscarriage, an emergency surgery, a concussion, a head-on car accident and a bout with the flu that turned to pneumonia.

"My life just felt like it was falling apart," Faris said.

The personal pandemonium and the recognition that career had overtaken everything else left Faris with the realization that she had misplaced her identity.

"My identity had been so misplaced in what I did," she said. "Here I am a professing Christian and it wasn't good enough to just be 'Paula.'"

READ ALSO: 10 COMFORTING BIBLE VERSES ABOUT SADNESS

So, the TV host stopped, prayed and did the unthinkable: she quit both of her dream jobs.

And at first, the transition was quite difficult.

Paula Faris

"I didn't know what to do with myself," she said. "I had a full-on identity crisis."

But Faris said she started getting herself rooted back into the Bible and began to surround herself with the right voices who spoke into her life about what truly matters. Over time, it all came together.

And now she's sharing her insights and realizations in "Called Out," a new book that not only tells her story, but also inspires others not to fall into the same pitfalls of misplacing significance and identity.

"God's calling me into a different space now," Faris said of her journey. "My worth is not my work."

And for anyone looking for guidance in their own lives, she offered an encouraging word: listen to God.

"God speaks to you. He speaks to you through people ... and that song on the radio ... through scriptures and sermons," Faris said. "You just have to listen for God's voice."

Want more inspiration? Read the Pure Flix Insider blog and consider streaming inspirational faith and family-friendly content right now on Pure Flix. You can get a free trial today!

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Billy Hallowell

Billy Hallowell has been working in journalism and media for more than a decade. His writings have appeared in Deseret News, TheBlaze, Human Events, Mediaite and on FoxNews.com, among other outlets. Hallowell has a B.A. in journalism and broadcasting from the College of Mount Saint Vincent in Riverdale, New York and an M.S. in social research from Hunter College in Manhattan, New York.

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