In this
issue: Current Events: This is a unique opportunity for you to experience laser coaching on a topic of your choice. Laser coaching is brief and gets right to the heart of the matter. The tone will be light, fun, challenging, and powerful. Come visit! Group size for this teleconference is limited. To reserve your spot, send an email to Subscribers Event. If you received this issue from a friend and you would like to read Current of Life regularly, you may subscribe here. Read prior issues here. Contact Ginny here. |
Ready Enough Ready or Not When I was in my twenties and working at my first corporate assignment, a manager shared a rule of thumb for planning your career: Aim for advancing to the next level once you have mastered 80% of your current job. While I considered this idea interesting, it went against my natural inclination which was to hold on to any current assignment, like a bulldog clenching a bone in its mouth, until I not only had mastered the job but also digested every last lesson there was to learn. Years later, after working in the same department for significantly past the 80% mark, I was “beyond ready” for change. As I accepted a new role, I was tempted to view it as the solution, until my new boss commented, “This will be a nice rotation for you, Ginny.” The word “rotation” caught my ear and reframed the opportunity. It made me see that the assignment didn’t have to hold out the illusion of permanence for me to feel secure. There would be something to gain with this new experience and then another opportunity would evolve from this one, perhaps even sooner than expected. And that is exactly what happened. Fixin’ To Get Ready There is a Texan expression called “fixin’ to get ready”. Just like it sounds, it means there is some hesitant fidgeting going on. Even when opportunities that we’ve long wished for appear before us, we sometimes shrink before them, retreating to the corner and declaring we’re “not ready”. The feeling of not being ready is a natural part of growth. Our soaring spirits want to advance and then our stomachs feel those butterflies as our minds nervously calculate the risks. The “fixin’ to get ready” syndrome shows up in a variety of ways. Here are just two examples I’ve witnessed recently: 1) A very accomplished professional who realized her continual pursuit of yet another credential was keeping her from going out and building her business; 2) The project manager at a consulting firm whose “not ready” nerves initially caused her to find fault with a very attractive job offer. When you catch yourself “fixin’ to get ready” ask yourself: What would make me feel ready? You can then determine whether you are waiting for a guarantee that doesn’t exist or whether there are some legitimate actions to take to get you ready. In What Way Are You Ready Enough? There is a difference between acting rashly and taking a calculated risk. The former implies impulsiveness while the latter involves a conscious boldness. This Week: Be aware of your own risk
tolerance and play with it a little. Challenge yourself as you
consider these two questions: “Too many people are thinking of
security instead of opportunity; Here's to you, |
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