Summer is Over and Time
for a Vocation!
August, 2010
By Craig Nathanson - The Vocational Coach™
Over 40? Vocation starts now!
Well, the summer is finally over, and kids are ready to go
back to school. For adults, especially those over 40, this time
associates with extra anxiety. Perhaps, you have spent the summer
avoiding the most important question you must answer. That’s
it. It is time to answer. What work must emerge through you
now? The difficult economy might influence you to settle for
just any job to pay the bills. However, don’t settle for
any job just for the money, this will be a big mistake. First,
take the time to become more self-aware and understand what
type of life you want to live for the next half of your journey.
You can recreate a new beginning
Despite any bills and money concerns you CAN recreate a second
half of your life which works better for you. Once you decide
what you really want to do, don’t stray from this path.
If you are living month to month then at least get a job or
better yet 2 or 3 part-time jobs that are in the area of your
passions. For example let’s say you love music but need
to make $75,000 a year and you haven’t figured out a way
to make this in the music industry. For your all life you have
been a customer service manager in retail. Your expenses are$
5,000 a month and you are quickly running out of money. You
need something fast. You are tempted to apply for what you have
always done customer service in a large retail chain that will
probably pay you close to what you need. Only one problem, you
don’t like the work and feel like you are wasting your
life. You feel you need the job because if you run out of money
you will lose your apartment and have no place to go! What should
you do?
Don’t take the job!
At least not until you have a plan to get you working for the
rest of your life around music.
First be clear as to where you want to make a contribution.
Make a list of what is most important to you. Align new goals
now to what is most important. Define your own version of your
perfect vocational day which you could live for the rest of
your life. Now at least you will have a gap between where you
are and where you want to go. Now, how can you close this gap?
First can you produce a product or service now which you can
sell which has something to do with music? Can you get 2 or
even 3 part-time jobs working around music? What if all of this
added up to $5,000 a month, wouldn’t that be great?
Not sure where to start?
Where do your interests and abilities align which you are motivated
right now to do? For example, you listed that you are good at
selling, designing, working with people, and advertising. Your
deep interests revolve around jazz, live music, piano, and teaching
music (piano). Ok, a good start. Now think first what could
you sell? Of course there are piano lessons but there are also
things like advertising for music stores, musical productions
and local theatres. Maybe you brand yourself as the Music Brand
getting the musical word out as your tagline. You offer advertising
and marketing for musicians as well as representing some local
artists directly. You also decide to offer piano lessons two
days a week and you take a job in a music retail store 10 hours
a week. You decide to write and produce a guide for learning
music. You sell this to your piano students.
Before long (it takes about 6 months to get this going) you
are making between 2500 and 3500 a month but you see the potential
for growth and you are happy!
You move!
You decide to move to a less expensive area. You are happy
now and all of a sudden you feel attractive and good about yourself.
You start to meet new people, and before long you meet someone
special. You decide to move in together. Your partner works
and all of a sudden you have a new support team and your overall
expenses are less.
One day you wake up to a new life!
One morning you wake up and suddenly realize you are happy
and have a new life!
You are clearly not rich but you are getting by. Most of your
days are filled with activities doing what you love. As a result,
you continue to have new ideas about how to grow your opportunities.
You wonder what your life would have been like if you had taken
that customer service job a year ago JUST for the money.
You look back and reflect
You made better choices. You decided to be clear about which
work needed to emerge through you now. You decided to no longer
accept a mundane life. Despite the economy you decided that
this was a good time to follow your heart. Well, you also made
a few financial moves. You dumped your retirement which was
against all solid financial advice because saving for retirement
now seemed like a silly idea. Now you never plan to stop working.
After all the ONLY people who retire are people who didn’t
love what they do. It was only $45,000 but it helped you get
through the tough times. You moved to a less expensive area
5 hours away and saved over $1000.00 per month on expenses.You
started going out more and soon met the new love of your life.
You knew that this was the right person when you shared your
dreams with this person. And he or she cheered you on!
This is the best time ever to have multiple streams of income
Fearful of the economy? Don’t be. Figure out now what
products and or services you can create and sell even if for
one dollar. If you can sell one product or service for a dollar,
you can sell many more products and services to more people
at 2 dollars and so on. Look at part-time jobs as an alternative
- several of them! Only work for one full-time role if
it closely aligns to your plan for passionate work and your
vocation. If not you are making a commitment to unhappiness.
I sometimes wish we could just lease ourselves to organizations
for 1 year on a trial basis. Then like a car, at the end of
the lease if we don’t find joy in our work, we could leave
if we choose and be paid back for wear and tear on the job!
Until this time comes, you must take your job search into your
own hands. This new push for job creation is silly.
I’d rather see a strategy to create meaningful work.
This is what makes a society work well. For now you will have
to take action yourself for an authentic life.
Most of us today have money concerns. Seeking a stable full-time
job in areas which you don’t enjoy is risky.
Defining what you want and which work must emerge through you
now is more important. With a vision of your own perfect vocational
day you can begin to move towards designing a life which works
better for you and soon everyone around you. You can do this
and you deserve this now!
I'll be cheering you on as you go!
Craig Nathanson
Craig Nathanson is the author of "How
to find the RIGHT work during challenging times: A new approach
to your life and work after 40" and is a coaching
expert who works with people over forty.
Visit Craig’s online
community 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 using skype and webcam and in Craig’s
office, or read other stories of mid-life change and renewal.
Craig lives and works in Petaluma, California. His office
is located at P.O Box 2823, Petaluma Ca, 94953. You can reach
him at 707-775-4020 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
return to index
|