| Career
Coaching: Ten things to do When You Really, Really Hate your
Job
by Cathy Goodwin
from totalrealestatesolutions.com
Career Coaching: Ten things to do When You Really, Really
Hate your Job
1. Begin focusing on what you want instead of how much you
want to escape. When you find yourself sharing the latest
horror story, stop in mid-sentence and say, "What I want
to have is..."
2. Create an image that describes you in your job. Are you
on a riverbank with no way to get to the other side? Lost
in a jungle? Poking through a thorny hedge? When you get comfortable
with the image, begin visualizing a change in the obstacle.
Imagine building a bridge across the river or finding a path
in the forest. Don't force the image or the change. When you're
ready it will come.
3. Think of developing skills, not serving time. Take every
course that's offered and focus on skills that can lay a foundation
for your own business or next job. Can you learn HTML or PowerPoint?
Can you use some evenings, weekends and lunch hours to solicit
some free lance gigs?
4. Focus on satisfactory, not superior performance. Use the
time difference to build your new life. People often say,
"I can't do anything -- I work ten hours a day!"
If you are firing yourself or expecting to be fired, your
job is finding a new job. Be ethical: you owe your company
the minimum you need to earn your salary." But don't
be surprised if you start to accomplish more than ever and
find yourself getting promoted.
5. What conflict are you escaping? Dishonesty? Corporate
greed? Hypocrisy? Allow yourself to wonder if these qualities
are mirrored in your own life -- or even in your mind. If
everyone around you seems dishonest, are you being dishonest
with yourself? With others? After you resolve your own conflict,
you may find the workplace has changed or you have been catapulted
into a new, more satisfying life.
6. Put on your shield and armor when you enter your workplace.
Everyone should learn how to create a psychic shield. Imagine
that you are surrounded by an outer shell that is made of
a solid material -- so strong that nothing can get through
to hurt you. Some people prefer to imagine a protective golden
light, but I think the solid shield is stronger. Take two
or three minutes to put on your shield, every day, before
you enter the workplace.
7. Give yourself a gift every day -- a splurge of time or
sensual taste buds. Read a book, talk to a friend, eat your
favorite food. Don't deaden your senses with alcohol (although
if you're a wine connoisseur, your special wine can be a gift)
or spend big bucks at the mall. Think simple.
8. Find at least one thing in your life to appreciate: the
softness of your cat's fur, the winter sky, the spontaneous
hug from a friend. Appreciate as much as possible about your
job: the money, the view from the window, the new computer,
friendly conversations with the guy down the hall. Savor the
experience. Appreciation is the engine that attracts good
things into your life.
9. Tune in to your intuition before deciding what to do next.
Meditate and listen to the world around you. The saying "frying
pan into the fire" is real. If your goals and desires
do not come from a secure place within yourself, you will
find yourself paying undue attention to wet blankets ("If
you quit you'll never get another job") and false friends
("Just quit! Move to Tahiti! You won't starve!").
Sometimes the same "advisor" proposes both ideas
in the same week. A good coach or counselor will give you
confidence in your own intuition, not impose their views of
what you should do now.
10. Write this down somewhere: After you've left -- and you
will -- all that time will seem to have gone in the blink
of an eye. You will have trouble remembering what bothered
you so much. The rest of your life will still be ahead of
you.
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