Posts Tagged ‘Right livelihood’

The Right Career

Tuesday, June 1st, 2010

If you can answer “yes” to the following questions you have discovered the right career for yourself:

  1. Does this vocation support, express and fulfill my mission? Your mission is the number one positive difference in the world that you want to make. It is the mark or footprint you want to leave behind and the main work you came in this world to do. Other jobs that you had along the way will often serve as steppingstones and preparation for your true vocation.
  2. Does it allow me to use my best talents and favorite skills? Your talents are natural abilities which either come easily to you or you can develop them much easier than trying to acquire talents you don’t have.
  3. Does this work energize and inspire me? This career will make you feel alive and time will seem to fly when you are doing it?
  4. Does it benefit me and others? Both are necessary or you will lose interest after a while.
  5. Do I feel passionate about doing this work? Your heart will be in it and the work will be exciting. You will feel that this work really matters.
  6. Do I delight in doing this work? Do I love and do it well? The right livelihood will bring you much joy and you will do it well. There will be times when you feel as if the creativity and work are effortlessly flowing through you. It will be expressed from deep within and from the core of who you are.

If you answered “yes” to these questions you have found your true vocation. At least you know what it is even if you are still in pursuit of actually doing this work. If you have not discovered the work that is right for you, then keep searching. The answers are within you. Rumi, the mystic poet put it this way, “Everyone is born for some particular work and the desire for this work is in every heart.”

Self-knowledge will lead you to your right work. Self-reflect by examining your life experiences to see the clues. What are the lessons from your life? What do your life experiences reveal to you about what you love and do best?

Your true work and mission will bring out the best of your potential, your fears and obstacles will be overcome or will melt away and it will fulfill you. When you discover a purpose and mission larger than yourself it will change your life. Look at the example of Mahatma Gandhi who transformed his life and the lives of many others after discovering and pursuing his mission.

From childhood to early adulthood Gandhi felt painfully shy, awkward, lacked self-confidence and was full of many fears. Later in his life he was courageous, confident and was able to unite the Indian people to free India from British rule. Gandhi’s compassion for the Indian people and his opposition to injustice created a burning desire in him to free India and this mission transformed him into someone who was considered by others to be a “Mathatma” or great soul.

This is the power that a great mission can have on you and others. When you discover a career that can help you to fulfill your mission you will have also found your true calling and right work.

Copyright 2010. Raymond Gerson.

Best regards,

Raymond Gerson

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Credit Statement Example: Reproduced with permission from Raymond Gerson at www.achievecollegesuccess.com.  Copyright 2010. Raymond Gerson. All rights reserved worldwide.

Follow Your Bliss and Mission

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

“Follow your bliss” was Mythology Professor Joseph Campbell’s reply when his students asked him, “What should I do with my life? What should be my vocation?” In other words, his message was to follow your heart and do work that brings you the greatest joy.

Your mission is a calling or higher purpose that you feel inspired to fulfill. A mission is any worthwhile purpose for which you feel a deep sense of commitment and connection. It will usually involve a cause you feel deeply about and use talents that bring you joy.

Bill Moyers recently interviewed Dr. Jane Goodall, the scientist who became well known for her work in Africa with gorillas and chimpanzees. She discovered her mission at a young age and had the courage to follow her bliss.

Fascinated by reading books about Tarzan, Jane Goodall at age eleven began to develop a longing to go to Africa to live among and study animals in the wild. Eventually, under the influence of famed anthropologist Dr. Louis Leakey, she became a scientist who spent years observing gorillas and chimps in their natural habitat.

Whereas her earlier mission had taken the form of studying animals in the wild many hours a day for years, it took on a different form over the past twenty years. As many animal species started becoming extinct or greatly reduced due to climate change, unnecessary killings and other factors, she began to travel extensively to teach others how to protect the environment and animal species. She travels over 300 hundred days a year to spread her message, especially to young people and students who often receive her as if she were a rock star. Many in her audience become actively involved in protecting animal species and the environment because of Jane Goodall’s passion and example.

The great love and compassion for animals that Dr. Goodall has was evident from her childhood. She has always been on a mission to help them, but her role as a scientist and observer diminished and her role as a teacher increased because she felt the need and inner calling to do so. Examples like hers can inspire us to discover our own mission, follow our bliss and live our dream.

For more information about Dr. Goodall and her work you can go to http://www.janegoodall.org.

Copyright 2009. Raymond Gerson

Best regards,

Raymond Gerson

Using Your Dissatisfaction to Find Work That Matters

Monday, June 15th, 2009

One clue for discovering work that matters to you can be found by noticing your own dissatisfaction with problems you see in the world. Are there problems that invoke compassion for others? Do you see problems or needs that make you feel sad or angry? Is there a need you would like to fulfill if you had the power to make a difference?

Dissatisfaction can be positive if you use your discontentment to make a contribution. How can you use your talents and skills to help fill a need you see in the world? Aristotle put it this way, ” Where your talents and the needs of the world meet, there lies your vocation.”

Copyright 2009. Raymond Gerson