Signed in as:
filler@godaddy.com
Signed in as:
filler@godaddy.com
You get to choose, change your interests, change your mind, and change directions.
I've never had a job I actually enjoyed.
I want work that matters to me – do I have to give up money for meaning?
I won't know who I am when my kids leave the nest.
I can't stop the spinning in my head to think beyond the career options I've already rejected
I don't have one passion – I'm interested in a lot of things and don't want to give any of them up
Did you feel lied to when someone "reassuringly" said "you can do anything you want"?
I did.
It's based on the assumption that we know what we want to do after graduation.
Maybe you were a pre-natal, pre-law, or pre-med student, but most of us spent more time writing papers (or at brunch) than thinking about, and preparing for, the world o
Did you feel lied to when someone "reassuringly" said "you can do anything you want"?
I did.
It's based on the assumption that we know what we want to do after graduation.
Maybe you were a pre-natal, pre-law, or pre-med student, but most of us spent more time writing papers (or at brunch) than thinking about, and preparing for, the world of work.
We'd have been free of a lot of distress if we had a clue about what we could do and like.
On campus, we were too young, too focused on learning to think much about the "What's next?."
We were busy feeding our intellectual curiosity and discerning how to live a life worth living.
So we ended up with a career equivalent to what we'd get from buying a house just on curb appeal.
No wonder so many have career frustration and disappo
On campus, we were too young, too focused on learning to think much about the "What's next?."
We were busy feeding our intellectual curiosity and discerning how to live a life worth living.
So we ended up with a career equivalent to what we'd get from buying a house just on curb appeal.
No wonder so many have career frustration and disappointment.
And why we still wonder we want to do when we grow up?