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    Home>>Career>>Stuck in mid-career? Try serendipity!

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    Stuck in mid-career? Try serendipity!
    Source: www.articlesnatch.com  Time:2008-1-27 14:34:30 Hit:
    I'm always fascinated when people tell me about a career
    change that -- sometimes literally -- falls into their laps.
    Recently I've even seen research suggesting that change happens
    without conscious planning, more often than we know.

    My neighbor "Ed" found his career, he says, when he literally
    fell from the choir loft into the church organ. He was so
    fascinated by the repairs that the specialist invited him to work
    in his shop. Through high school, Ed did small chores and later
    graduated to apprentice repair. Now he owns a firm that repairs
    church organs all over the region

    According to a story from long ago, the California Highway Patrol
    stopped a man for speeding. Noting that he handled the car
    exceptionally well at high speeds, they suggested he apply to the
    CHP. Now he can drive ninety miles an hour all day long.

    In her book Fighting Fire, Caroline Paul recalls the man who came
    up to her in the gym, complimented her strength, and handed her a
    Fire Department recruiting pamphlet. Caroline, a Stanford
    graduate who had majored in fine arts, went on to become one of
    the first women fire fighters in San Francisco.

    Three Dog Bakery was formed when a dog refused to eat. The vet
    suggested, "Why don't you cook for her?" The dog's owner had no
    idea where to begin. He modified a cookie recipe and the dog
    wolfed it down. That was the beginning of an empire.

    I'm trying to collect more serendipity stories, but people who
    fall into careers they love do not read self-help books or call
    career coaches. I suspect we all hear many messages. A
    professor says to a student, "You have a knack for this subject
    and you should major in it." A neighbor says, "You ought to
    consider making a career out of your talent." And the
    conversation is forgotten half an hour later.

    Messages are rarely presented as advice. They are invitations. If
    you say "no" or don't open the envelope, they'll just go away
    quietly. Meanwhile, you struggle with a career you've outgrown,
    or you try to live up to someone else's dream.

    I urge clients to be open to invitations -- not advice. As you
    open your intuition and become focused on what you want, you'll
    find yourself attracting more invitations. Stuck? Stop pounding
    on the door of career change, ring the bell gently and wait to
    see what unfolds.

    Cathy Goodwin, Ph.D. Author, Career Coach, Speaker
    *Fast Track to Career Freedom*
    http://www.movinglady.com
    505-534-4294 cathy@...
    Teleclasses: http://www.movinglady.com/classes.html




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