Discover What
You Really Want To Do
by: Graham and Julie
Are you doing what you really
want to do or did you just fall or wander into the job you now have. As a
friend of ours once said,’ I am one of twenty two doctors in our family. The
only ones in our family who are not doctors are the dogs and cats’. Did you
decide what you wanted to do or are you one of a growing number whose work was
dictated by circumstances or their parents?
The question is not what are you
doing and who put you there but; are you happy? If you are not doing what you
really want to do then the chances are that you are unhappy and that is
affecting your health and relationships as well as other parts of your life.
As John D Rockefeller III stated
"The road to happiness lies in two simple principles: find what interests
you and that you can do well, and put your whole soul into it every bit of
energy and ambition and natural ability you have."
The problem is that although we
are aware, deep down, of what we want to do the hard part is putting those
thoughts into action. Actually doing it. Perhaps you are trapped in the
thinking process that says…; “ well I can’t really change”. How will I pay the
mortgage? How will I pay the school fees? How will I ……..
Or perhaps your thinking says it
is better the devil you know than the one you don’t.
Or are you thinking well I’m
lucky really I have a regular job that pays sufficient salary (just about) and
others are not as lucky as me?
Whatever your story. Just stop
for a moment and ask yourself:
What is really driving me?
What makes me do what I do?
Sarah, a friend of ours, is 57
years of age, single, an only child with no parents alive and no children. In
our language, she is the end of the line. A successful sales manager for an
international company. But her world has just collapsed. A week before
Christmas she was made redundant with little or no warning. She has given her
life to the industry she worked in and feels very let down, bitter and
disappointed. After all, she had it all worked out. Retirement happens at 60,
the mortgage will be paid off, the pension fund will start to pay up and then
she will be able to decide what she wants to do in the future.
But that hasn’t happened. She is
three years short and needs work. Her initial calls to her vast network of
friends and colleagues has resulted in either, sympathy, not returned or I’m
sorry but…you understand…we need ur hmph younger people… On the other hand
there are those who kept her confidence up by inviting her for an interview only
to find on arrival that either there was no job or ur hmmph we found someone
younger.
So Sarah was forced to ask
herself: ‘Where do I go from here?’
She doesn’t want to
retire….she’s too young for that!!! The lack of response from her industry and
so called friends and network has forced her to ask herself, ‘What do I really
want to do?’
If I can’t continue the habit
and stay in the industry, ‘What do I really want to do?’
She started to ask herself;
What really drives me?
What made me do what I did?
What did I love most about the
job?
Gradually she had to acknowledge
that most of her working life had been driven by fear. Fear of not being able
to pay the mortgage.
Fear of getting into debt.
Fear of failing a credit check.
Fear of being a failure.
Fear of having to be on her own.
However, she also realised that
what had driven her to stay in her industry all her life was the love she had
for putting teams of people together. The love of developing people who felt
they couldn’t achieve. The love of being a nanny, nurse, coach, counsellor etc
to young and developing sales teams. The enjoyment she got out of caring for
others, steering them, cajoling them. It was almost that over the years her
sales teams had become her family and she enjoyed that. What’s more she found
that her greatest enjoyment had come from turning around ailing, little known
or unsuccessful products.
Now she started to work with a
new vigour. Instead of being an old or aged, victim, with little or no hope of
getting work. She started to scan the ads and rewrite her CV as a caring,
coach, who loved developing and growing sales teams of young people. Someone
who could be relied upon to introduce vigour and sparkle to old, tired and
little known products.
We don’t have a happy ending to
the story yet, but Sarah had three interviews last week and one company has
called to see her again as they are interested in what she might have to offer
them. We are all keeping our fingers crossed.
And Sarah? She has a new spring
in her step. A belief that she has discovered what she really wants to do. She
is constantly focused in the positive. We have no doubt that she will get what
she wants.
The moral to the story. The
answer is always inside yourself. The answer is in your thoughts. Look deep
inside yourself. Ask yourself; What really drives me? What deep down is the
reason I’m on the planet. Don’t cheat yourself: stay with the question.. You
will know when you find it because your whole body feels: yes I’ve got the
right answer. Then: Just accept it, change your thoughts and believe in
yourself. And watch life change.
On other hand, as Beth Mende
Conny stated, "If you don't take control of your life, don't complain when
others do."
Julie and Graham
www.desktop-meditation.com
About The Author
Julie and Graham live in the
Canary Islands where they pursue their love for writing, photography and
spirituality.
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