About six months after graduating from college, I had to call a meeting with my friend from college, we Jamie, on employment. She studied sociology and took a job with a job that pays well, but was not related to his major. After a few months in the job market, she concluded that there is not much, but they certainly enjoyed their content. While we talked, I asked him about his eye for a position that is rewarding for them to keep, and I secretly hoped she would not allow it to put in this position permanent. Fast forward 15 years later. Jamie was still in the same company (even if it’s been promoted several times) and had not changed much.
One factor that has always Jamie to work in this context was the lifestyle they chose, when they started earning their livelihood impressive. She did not want to another position, she was thrilled (which certainly pay less), because they be able, wanted to make her monthly $ 450 car payment to find. She wanted to continue traveling over the weekend to visit with friends in different parts of the country. They had built a whole list of things that they should lose their dwindling paycheck. After a good car and jet around the country seemed exciting. But I could not help but wonder whether it will affect the career satisfaction have finally paid off.
All of us make decisions about our careers, which are partly motivated by financial considerations. This is necessary. But sometimes we let the lure of financial security and to maintain a certain lifestyle, most of the wheel. Most of us are to live by the underlying fear of change fear of losing our things and our ways, and affects the fear of failure at something new. We collude with our fear. In this agreement, we do not take risks and allow our imagination to hold title and salaries. But in exchange we have with the knowledge that we do not reach our potential and that there is little sense in what we do, day to day living.
Do you understand what you enjoy doing and it’s still a scary and risky. But, after your right path eventually lead you to real career and life satisfaction (and financial reward). When Steve Jobs gave the keynote speech at Stanford in 2005, he shared his personal story of how he began, grew, was drawn, then became one of the most innovative companies reinstated and visionary. He developed and maintained a company that was really a “game changer”. The key to success was in his determination to do a great job and love the work that he has found. This love makes the difference and echoed through his professional and personal life.
I am not sure that the people immediately left their jobs they hate to stop traveling or stop to enjoy the things that they can afford to have. But I invite all of us to take a look at our career satisfaction. If you do not like what you are doing then you change it. Begin to reduce the size of your lifestyle. You save more than spend more money. Stop worrying about maintaining your image coveted title and salary. Forge new connections to advise you and help you discover new opportunities. Do not overlook the possibilities, even if they seem outrageous or unrealistic. Decide now, and you keep making over and over again that you finally find your true love, so to speak.
We spend at least one third of our lives at work. Why should this precious time on something we know is not good for us? If we are brave enough, we will stop, excuses and stop procrastinating. So even if you start in your career or are well established, you still have time to consider and pursue the goal of your life. We want higher wages possible that the work we do, but we pay the price if we are our spiritual self, emotional compromise, are physical and mental wages unpredictable.
Nicole Heckers, MA, BCPC, is a life coach practice in Denver, Colorado. Working with customers via telephone / Skype or face-to-face is its role in helping people back and redefine their mission, whether the discovery of the passage of a life purpose, career satisfaction and spiritual growth. In 2009, Nicole released the Research Career Guide Get a job, she and her husband with his business partner John Hecker’s co-author. She is currently working on a handbook to help people solve difficult problems through the exploration and use of logging invited. They can be contacted at 303.480.5484 or nheckers@asaeadvice.com
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