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How to attract the work you love
By Craig Nathanson, The Vocational Coach
First, decide what you want! Yes, it’s that easy and that hard. What do
you love to do?
Decorate a house, take pictures, teach children or work with the
elderly?
Do you approve?
Once we figure out what we love to do, many of us make the fatal
mistake; we ask someone else for approval.
You will never get final approval from someone else
Even if you get the approval from someone else, their approval will
be conditional. Permission to do the work you love must come from you.
Let’s go down the list.
Your
spouse will be the first to say “No” because he or she will feel
intimated by your change of heart and life.
Your
kids probably won’t approve or understand much.
Your
boss? Well, you know the answer here.
Your
parents? Of course not. After all, you are a product of their belief
system and you must not do something they would not do. I must
add that if your parents are no longer living,
obviously you won’t be able to get the approval you are seeking.
Your
close friends might approve, but only if they have worked out their own
vocational happiness. If not, they will worry how the changes
in your life will affect their relationship with you.
Strangers
might give you permission, especially those you share deep conversations
with on an airplane, but then you will never have to
see them again.
Are there exceptions?
Maybe, if you are lucky, you will have someone supportive in your
life. Sadly, all too often, I have seen people’s dreams rejected by the
very people they thought they could count on for support.
Society doesn’t help
The standard notion is that we work at jobs that lead to careers so
we can retire, and then, if we’re lucky, do what we enjoy. This idea is
outdated and illogical.
Skip the retirement part
A recent guest on my show, Monica Lee, picked up a paintbrush for
the first time at age 40. Not long after that she was transferring her
thoughts and feelings to canvas and selling her paintings worldwide.
With maturity she realized that it was of little importance how others
perceived her work. Instead, what really mattered was how much she
enjoyed putting color and form on canvas.
When Monica opened her own gallery, the uncertainty of making ends meet
each month led her to sleep in the back of the gallery in a makeshift
bed. She showered under a garden hose and laundered her clothes by hand
while she rented out her home to others to supplement her income as an
artist.
Years later, the challenge of cancer came and went, and her work helped
carry her through the difficult times. Today, at nearly 60, her art
work, under the name MoVan, sells all over the world and Monica says she
has never been happier.
What if you quit or got fired today?
How long could you go before making any money? One month, six
months, a year?
Are you willing to cash in other resources now to extend your time? If
so, now how much more time will you have? After forty, we need more time
rather than more money. Once you start making an income, this time doing
what you love, how much do you really need to make?
Make it less than you are making in your corporate job
To pursue the work they love, many people decide they must make what
they made before. This is a flawed strategy. When your vocational
passion takes you in the direction of working for yourself or others, it
usually means starting out making 25-30% less than what you made before.
Have you turned your back yet?
Not yet? Good — let’s summarize what we have done thus far.
You figured out what you want to do, you’ve given yourself approval and
you’ve identified how long you could go without making an income. What’s
next? Well, these are the hurdles that stop most people.
Next — Take action!
Visit, read about, and meet other people who make an income doing
what you want to do. They have already jumped over the hurdles you will
encounter soon, and they can provide valuable insight you will need for
your journey.
Get ready to be lonely
Pursuing what you love to do vs. accepting “just” a job will be very
lonely. In fact, this will be the loneliest road you will ever be on.
It’s a lonely road because there are very few people on it. You meet a
few rebels, a few middle-age run-aways and, from time to time, a younger
person who learned early not to waste his life with empty, meaningless
jobs like his parents did before him.
Better to join the rat race?
Ever wonder why the terms we have for work have so many negative
meanings?
Rat
race (something we have to do, like rats on a wheel),
Career
or fast track (can’t slow down to enjoy it)
Re-tire
(“slow down” + “get ready to tire”)
These certainly don’t help to motivate us to swim against the tide and
do something different.
What happens in mid-life?
A crisis will hit sometime after age 35 or so. Our crises come in
different shapes and sizes and it is normal to have one, or even more
than one. You might get divorced, have to deal with a sudden death in
the family, a layoff, or a serious illness. In many cases, none of these
occur but suddenly you’re confronted with a deep sadness, and you
wonder, “Is this all there is?” You feel empty inside.
What you must do?
Many people at this stage, especially those over forty, simply turn
back before reaching their dreams. The risks and tradeoffs we have to
make to pursue our dreams just seem too impractical at this stage in our
lives. So many people at this stage simply take a job and postpone the
next phase of their life for ten years, or more, or even forever!
You can be different!
You can attract the work you love by figuring out what you want,
giving yourself permission to pursue it, and making a plan to pursue it.
This will be the greatest gift you ever give yourself and, once you do,
you will never look back.
As always, I’ll be cheering you on as you go!
Craig Nathanson
Craig Nathanson is the author
of P Is For Perfect: Your Perfect Vocational Day and a coaching expert
who works with people over forty. Craig’s new E-book, Discover and live
your passion 365 days a year is a workshop in a box designed to help
busy adults go insane with their work. Craig’s systematic approach, the
trademark "Ten P" process,’’ helps people break free and move toward the
work they love. Visit Craig’s online community at
www.thevocationalcoach.com here you can take a class, get more
ideas through Craig Nathanson’s books and CD’s, get some private
coaching over the phone or read other stories of mid-life change and
renewal.
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