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Articles on Jobseekers Advice If you would like to submit an article to Jobseekers Advice, then please feel free to contact us. We are always looking for a wide range of articles dealing with career advice, CV advice, interview advice, working abroad, employment issues, education and training and other recruitment or careers related topics. The articles can be the result of professional experience or personal insight - we are looking to offer all points of view.
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SEARCHING FOR YOUR CALLING � Quest or Curse? They tend to be their own
harshest critics, often riddled with self-doubt and embarrassment
about not getting this �career thing� right. Maintaining a
constructive attitude is challenging. In spite of contrary statistics
- such as, the average American changes jobs eight times over the
course of his/her lifetime - we still tend to harbor the expectation
that we �should� decide by our late 20's/early 30's what we want to do
and follow that thread for the remainder of our working lives. As T.
puts it, �My search for work I�m passionate about is regarded by my
friends like a child�s drawing that�s put up on the refrigerator?isn't
that cute!� If you�re in a career
transition, what�s the finger-pointing you�re doing at yourself? Does
any of these sound familiar? What did you learn in your
formal education about making a good career choice? Case rests. Support
systems for people in career transition are lagging woefully behind
the sea changes that are occurring in the way we do work. But you
are ultimately responsible for your attitude. Every day, the single
most important decision you make is your outlook toward your search.
Here are some suggestions for maintaining positive momentum: Don't be afraid to make a
temporary job move, to buy time and diminish the financial pressure.
You can use it to check out some components of your eventual choice. And finally, here's a
perspective I'd like to offer. Engaging courageously and
wholeheartedly with the question �What should I do?� is the single
most pro-active step you can take. After interviewing 900 people, Po
concluded that the biggest obstacle to answering the question is guilt
about taking it seriously. Work, when it's right, is how we forge
our place in the world; the process of finding it clarifies and hones
who we are and who we want to be. Asking the hard questions (What do
I want? What impact do I want to have? Who do I want to become?) and
giving time to the inner and outer research, is surely one of the most
important life investments you can make.
Nina Ham, certified coach and
licensed psychotherapist, is principal of Success from the Inside Out,
providing individual coaching and teleseminars to build the skills,
attitudes and habits for sustainable success in your career or
business. Mail to:
Nina@womenssuccesscoach.com,
subscribe in subject line, for free monthly e-zine, or visit
http://www.SuccessfromtheInsideOut.com.
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