January 28th, 2008
Your Ultimate Life – Step Four
Happy New Year! I hope 2008 is off to a great start for you.
This month, I take you through a five-part process to define your ultimate life vision. It’s important to define a happy life before defining your specific career goals. Once you know what’s most important to you overall, you can design your career around those things. Therefore, your career will fit in with your life, rather than forcing your life to somehow fit around your career.
As an executive coach, I help professional women discover their authentic career fit. I want to help you do the same. This means identifying a career that:
- Is a natural fit for your authentic self
- Is in alignment with your skills, interests and values
- Feels right and meets your personal and professional needs
Before I take clients through the steps of identifying their ideal career fit, I first have them define their ideal life. I ask them to create a description of their ultimate life.
Each week in January, I’ll take you through a specific step to help define your ultimate life vision. These exercises involve brainstorming and writing down specific aspects of your ideal life vision. I provide thought-provoking questions to help you get clear on what you’d like your life to “look like.”
Your Ultimate Life – Step Four
The fourth step in defining your ultimate life vision is defining your work life. Life is way too short to be in a job that makes us miserable. Doing work we love is part of living life to the fullest!
In this exercise, we’re just focusing on the logistics of your work life. We’re not focusing on what you do…yet. That will come in subsequent phases of the process that I’ll cover in future columns.
The following questions will get you started. Feel free to add additional details that come to mind. If you’re not exactly sure how to answer these questions, that’s okay. Simply write the first thing that comes to mind. The idea here is to start the process of brainstorming your life vision.
Let your creativity flow and do not judge or censor yourself. Have fun with it! There are always practicalities to consider (kids in school, a partner’s job, family nearby, etc.), but you have permission to suspend reality for the purposes of this exercise. Think about it in these terms: “If I could not fail, how would I like my life to be?”
- How many hours a day do you work?
- How many days a week do you work?
- What hours do you work?
- Describe your ideal work day from the moment you wake up to the moment you go to bed.
- Do you work in an office, at home or on the road?
- Do you work for a small, medium or large organization?
Give yourself the time and space to ponder these questions. Remember, don’t filter anything - let your creativity flow!
I suggest you work on this a little bit each day. This will allow you to consistently focus on the process and will open you up to new possibilities.
Schedule time in your calendar to complete this fourth step in the next seven days. That way, you’ll be sure to get it done and not let it linger on that never-ending to do list.
I wish you much continued success as you move towards defining a life you love!
Until next month…
Warmly,
Maret


February 1st, 2008 at 10:13 am
HI Maret,
I woke up this morning with a burning question in my head that I beleive is directly related to defining an ultimate life.
The question is, what is the difference between a “passion” and a “hobby”?
I am considering an entrepeneurial path as to date, I have been unable to find a good fit in the typical “workplace”. So making this distinction between a passion and a hobby, seemed important. Any thoughts?
Brigid
February 1st, 2008 at 7:25 pm
Hi Maret!
you have a nice professional site. I am just starting out
I stumbled across your’s since we have a similar topic…just for fun.
A hint: take a close look at your banner.
Happy New Year _2008_
To Your Success
Pascy
February 6th, 2008 at 7:40 am
Hi Brigid,
You pose a great question about professional passions vs. hobbies. We all have hobbies that interest us and sometimes we consider turning a hobby into our vocation.
If you want to turn your hobby into a full-time career, I suggest you create a preliminary business plan. Run the numbers to see if you can earn your target income through your hobby. If the numbers work out, then you know it is a viable option!
Thank you for your posting and all the best to you.