Twenty Ways to find the
Work you love
March, 2007
By Craig Nathanson
The Vocational Coach
Do you ever wish you had a few more options when trying
to find the work you love?
Here are some ideas that might help expand your thinking.
- Change your physical space when thinking about what
you want to do.
(Motion changes emotion and a new location helps you think
about things from a new vantage point.)
- Think about your problem (opportunity!) from the
perspective of someone else. Imagine someone you
admire is giving you advice about what to do.
(This takes practice, but you’ll get different answers
that may be helpful.)
- Draw a picture of what you want. Imagine how it
sounds, feels, smells, and tastes.
(We all make meaning through our five senses.)
- Find someone else who is doing what you want to
do and ask them for ideas.
(This is called “modeling.” If what they are doing
works for them, why not for you?)
- Define what being successful means to YOU.
(You may need to redefine the meaning of success as compared
to all the external meanings you have learned.)
- Practice thinking about how you can do what you
love.
(Think about how you are going to think about it; break your
regular negative thought patterns)
- Laugh!
(Humor helps break the negative patterns of thinking you may
find yourself in during this time of transition.)
- Ask yourself, how would an eight year-old deal with
this?
(It’s amazing what questions kids can ask to break it
all down.)
- Post the challenge on your wall for a few days.
(Your brain will get tired of not having an answer.)
- Figure out what you have at risk if you don’t
do the work the love now.
(It’s hard to be creative when nothing is at stake.)
- Define a “moving-towards” strategy.
(Positive and Proactive strategies will always defeat negative
and reactive ones.)
- Disassociate and watch yourself doing what you love.
What did you do?
(You will be amazed at the ideas you will come up with.)
- Move ahead in time by one year and write a letter
to yourself telling you what you should do.
(Part of the problem with planning in the present is that
you include the baggage of the past.)
- Write down in 30 minutes all the ideas you can think
of to find the work you love.
(When we break overwhelming tasks into small amounts of time,
our motivation and energy increases)
- Ask yourself, “What’s the next step
I should take?” Then spend 30 minutes doing
physical exercise. When you come back, write down the first
answer that comes to mind.
(Those endorphins you get from exercise are the best mind
advancing drug there is.)
- Open the dictionary and read the first word you
see. Read the definition. Ask yourself, “How
could this apply in helping me do what I love now?”
(Divergent thinking can help you notice solutions from a different
angle.)
- If you took a big risk right now, what are the worst
and the best things that could happen? (Sometimes
all it takes is using that “risk taking muscle”
a few times.)
- Say to yourself, “I INTEND to resolve this”.
(“I hope” isn’t good enough. Go ahead and
try it. No one is listening. Notice the difference?)
- Reward yourself as you make some progress.
(Internal rewards such as a nap or a ice cream cone will always
last longer than external ones.)
- Allow yourself ten minutes of quiet time daily to
just sit and be aware. Take deep breaths and be aware of your
thoughts.
(This will become the most magical part of your day.)
CONGRATULATIONS on taking the first creative steps towards
doing what you love!
Now write down any new ideas you can come up with for the next
steps you can take today.
I’ll be cheering you on from the sidelines.
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
where 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.
Craig lives in San Anselmo, California. You can reach him at
415-457-0550 or at craig@thevocationalcoach.com.
Craig's Vocational Passion Newsletters are edited by Anita
Flegg at The Sharp Quill. The Sharp Quill -- www.sharpquill.com
-- specializes in writing and editing for small business. You
can see Anita's vocational story at http://www.thevocationalcoach.com/_vocational_community/_real_stories/story_anita.html
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