 |
Is finding your passion paradise, as some articles lead you
to believe? No, but when you also get to 'name your poison,' it comes pretty close.
Take Kelly, for instance. Kelly has chosen to return to being a full-time homemaker. She
works hard and loves it, though in her own words it involves grunt work, chaos and
politics - as well as some life-and-death moments."Dirty bathrooms, children
fighting and throwing up, broken appliances, repair people who don't show, trips to the
ER, teacher conferences, weird relatives, fallen soufflés, |
 |
|
| mindless trips to the grocery store, this I
understand," she says. "It's my passion. My former career involved grunt work,
chaos and politics too, but kinds that really annoyed me. No promotion ever made it
rewarding. I don't mind a tantrum from a two-year old, but find it inappropriate in an
adult. I like being my own boss and having all the responsibility. I'm happy as a clam
taking care of my grandchildren and their home while their parents both work. It suits me.
It's all heart and the most meaningful work there is ... to me." |
ANOTHER POINT OF VIEW
When Marla talks about the downside of her job - the grunt work, chaos and politics - it's
the same, only different. "Sure I don't like the expense reports," she says,
"the tension of deadlines, the travel, the meetings, but I don't mind them that much,
and the good points far outweigh the negatives. What I found I couldn't stand in my last
job [with a non-profit] was working with a Board, rigid structure, an all-female office,
and all that emotion."
When we are encouraged to find the work for which we have passion, it's important that it
contain both something we really love to do, that's engaging and meaningful to us, and for
which we have a talent - AND - a downside that doesn't drive us nuts.
THE PART IS NOT THE WHOLE
The
core of the job must be something that grabs us, and we're naturally good at - whether
it's raising children, raising wheat, raising money, or raising bottom lines - but the
core of the job is not the whole job.
NOT IN MY JOB DESCRIPTION
- The manager at our local Home Depot must figure out what to do with the birds that enter
through the nursery and are building nests on shelves, dive bombing customers, and pooping
everywhere.
- The 5-star resort Executive Chef rarely cooks anything. What he does is check nametags,
order produce, schedule banquets, plan menus, meet with the press, and avoid overtime for
his 25 employees in a still-understaffed kitchen that runs 12-14/7.
- The coach who decides to start his own practice quickly finds he must spend over half
his time marketing.
- The pathologist looks at slides, yes, and consults with physicians, but he also manages
a hospital lab of 250 people.
- Last time I visited the restaurant Tony owns, he was helping bus tables. Later I saw him
heading for the men's room with a plunger in his hand.
RETHINK
If you find yourself saying, "This isn't what it was cracked up to be," sit back
and analyze. Is the core of the work something you love? Can you rearrange the downside in
any way?
No job or career field will be doing what you love to do 100% of the time, but are you
getting to do it most of the time? And are the odd things that come with it tolerable
enough? If not, could you make a few tweaks? Change to a smaller or larger office? Hire or
fire someone? Find something closer to home or in another state? Refuse to do something,
or request to do something?
If you're very lucky, you'll find something so natural and enjoyable to you, you'll talk
like Satchel Paige, who said, "I ain't ever had a job, I just always played
baseball."
Or like my friend Kelly who, when I ask her what she did today, replies, "Nothing
really." And if you ask her how she stands the dirty diapers, says, "That's my
GRANDSON," like you were a crazy person.
If you're working at something you're passionate about, all of it becomes seamless - the
good and the bad. It becomes what you are, as much as what you do, and it is not what
others call "work." It's well worth finding and I encourage you to.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
©Susan Dunn, MA, http://www.susandunn.cc.
Coaching, Internet courses and ebooks for your personal and professional development.
Retirement, midlife, transitions, career, relationships. For FREE ezine, mailto:sdunn@susandunn.cc with "ezine" for
subject line.

Do you know someone who would benefit from this article? We can
send your friend a strictly confidential, one-time email telling them about this article.
Your privacy and your friend's privacy is your business... no spam! Click here and tell a friend!
|
 |
 |
| Real-world, common sense strategies
for small and home based business success. Your issues... real answers. |
|
 |
|
|
 |
|
|