Just yesterday morning I got the news: Thank you for applying, but we have chosen another candidate for the position. Or something to that effect. It feels like so long ago! I had a lot of my hope banking on this job, so it was certainly a let-down that I didn’t get it, after getting so far. I had three wonderful people give me great recommendations and even a fourth one who put in some good words. In the end, it might have come down to exactly what I had feared… not enough professional experience in event planning and scheduling.
I had the passion, I had the drive, I had the excitement and enthusiasm! I just didn’t have the years of experience to back me up. I’m still waiting to hear back regarding feedback on how I was as a candidate so I can improve myself for the next try. I really wish I had gotten this one though – it was perfect for what I want out of life now. At least it didn’t hit me as hard as I thought it would. It helped that I had just heard of some new, exciting opportunities, so now I’m applying for those. Just gotta keep plowing forward!
Ironic then, that last night I listened to a speaker sharing advice on how to live our professional lives and today I listened to a speaker doing much the same. I was oddly inspired, yet weary. Sometimes you know what you should do, but it’s just not the right time emotionally. I felt like that last night, as the pangs of a job not earned hit my subconscious. I didn’t think it was affecting me much, but apparently it was. Let me tell you, it is the most bizarre feeling, to be inspired and discontent at the same time. It’s hard to reconcile. Well, I took those lessons and pondered them on my way home, as I questioned many things in my life. Then today I was feeling much more receptive to the advice presented. I just need time to recover from everything I put into the potential job.
Let’s move on to the pointers that the two speakers gave, starting with Jordan Belfort:
~”motion creates emotion” – Put your body physically a certain way and you will start to feel that way. Stand tall and confident and you will feel more confident. Hang your head and look at the ground and you will begin to feel sad. Move how you want to feel and you can create that emotion through body language.
~”act as if” – Whatever your goal is, start acting as if you have already attained it. You will begin to open doors to lead you towards that very goal. (This could work well in line with the advice that tells you to start taking on duties of those above you when you want to get a promotion/raise. Just start working like you already have that job!)
~”where focus goes, energy flows” – The things you focus on, you will pick out more readily than everything else. So focus on what you want to get and don’t expend resources on the rest. We’re great at filtering out things to find what we want, but if we’re preoccupied with our weaknesses or problems, that’s all we’ll see.
~”change the way you look at things and the things you look at will change” – Similar to above. When you focus on the good and what you want, you will go towards it. When you shift focus down to the things holding you back, you will plummet.
~”build a new pattern” – From our youth, we develop patterns. Patterns of thought, patterns of behavior, patterns of expectations. Don’t let those inhibit you. Break old patterns and start adjusting them bit by bit. Next thing you know, it’ll be second nature!
~”mistakes are resources” – Every time you make a mistake, it’s a chance to learn. Failure is in the eye of the beholder. Take each stumble as a lesson so you don’t run into the same issue again. Successful entrepreneurs especially know this; they’ve all failed and learned!
~”model after someone successful” – Find someone (or “someones”) doing what you want to accomplish and find a formula of their actions that work for you. Take what they do best, what has led them to success, and learn from it.
~”Mother Nature has equipped you with everything you need” – You just need to harness that natural talent!
And today’s speaker was Ms. Amy Lukken from Interface, with similar wisdom:
~People tend to focus on the negative, like when you get a report card with As and Bs and one D. All parents will immediately see the D and question it. We’re always working to improve our weaknesses (but what about our strengths?). Around the time we’re 3-9, our natural talents start to emerge. We can and should take those and find ways to develop them and apply them to future jobs.
~She showed us a t-shirt that said: Failure is NOT an option. Good idea, but the most prominent words were “failure” and “not.” Walking around seeing them all day doesn’t give the right impression. (As I like to say, double negative wording is detrimental to the positive meaning they hide. Just word things positively!)
~Discover your passion and aim for that. You shouldn’t get stuck in a job you hate just because it is stable, pays well, etc. Oftentimes there are ways to incorporate what you’re good at and your passions into many types of roles. (Take me, for example – I’m good at proofreading, so I could be an editor in many organizations.)
Now I’ll take their words, trying to remember it all as I move forward.