Why Do You Have a Job? Five False Beliefs that Lead People into Jobs they Hate by Debra Thorsen
If you find yourself stuck in a job that you don't enjoy or in a company
that isn't fun to work for, the first step to making a change is asking
yourself, "How did I get here?"Your being here at this time
in your life is not a random event. You have made choices and decisions
along the way to get here. Your individual journey has led you to
this exact point.
And you are not broken. You don't need to be fixed. No one is to blame.
You have made choices based upon beliefs that you have held. And beliefs
are nothing more than thought habits. They are ideas that you have
thought over and over again until they became a belief. Like an old
record, you may be stuck in a groove or a belief that no longer works
for you.
So, before you decide to leave your job or company or make any change,
it is a valuable exercise to pause for a moment and examine your beliefs.
If you don't take the time to do this, you will make choices based
upon old beliefs and end up in the same place.
In working with my coaching clients, I find that there are five key beliefs that lead people into a job that does not bring them joy. I will outline them here.
Belief #1: Money: Getting a corporate job is the best way to
make money. We are all conditioned to believe that having a job is
the best way to make money by our parents, teachers, and many well-meaning
adults. There is a systemic belief in our society that a job is the
best path to wealth. It is simply not true. You will never make significant
wealth (of the retire early, be completely financially free, lack
of money doesn't guide my decisions type of wealth) by going to a
9 to 5 job.
I often read stories in mainstream magazines of people who retire early by having two income earners in the family, living extremely frugally, and saving almost all of their earnings for retirement. Not a really fun way to live in my estimation!
I would rather earn lots of money doing what I love on my own time
schedule and not waiting until I retire to have fun. Can I do this
in a regular job? I couldn't. I was making a six-figure income working
insane hours and traveling constantly. I made less money early in
my career doing the 8:30 to 5:30 grind but I wasn't having any fun
and I spent every dollar that I earned.
Why can't you good make money in a job? First, only the top echelon
of workers make over $100,000. The system is set up this way - as
a pyramid. The corporate pyramid has lots of low-paid worker bees
and only a few high-paid executives. Second, you are taxed heavily
on earned income. The tax system is designed to benefit corporations.
Third, you don't get any residual income - once you stop working,
the dollars stop coming. You aren't building up any passive income
streams. You may design a product or software for your company - but
the company gets the passive or residual income from your efforts.
Equity = wealth. All equity goes to the shareholders. It is great
to work in a company that offers its employees an ownership stake
- in fact I wouldn't consider working for one that doesn't. The only
downside is that you don't have control of most of the decisions being
made. I know many people who have been downsized out of tech companies
because the leadership team made bad decisions.
Belief #2: Responsibility: I should get a corporate job - it
is what a responsible adult does. Once again, this is a belief that
is drummed into you early. It goes something like this - study hard
in school, get good grades, get into a good college, maybe get a graduate
degree, get a prestigious job and the money and success will flow
to you. This is the path that responsible people choose.
I choose this path. Did well in school, B.A. from University of Virginia,
MBA from Carnegie Mellon University. Money and success did flow to
me. But I was overworked, uninspired and getting burned out and depressed.
Is being at work all the time, getting burned out, and depressed what
a responsible adult does? I don't think so! Yes, I have a responsibility
to provide for my family - but if there is a way that I can do this
without sacrificing my sacred family time and peace of mind - don't
I have a responsibility to follow that path?
Belief #3: Importance: If I get a high-paying job and an impressive
title, I will be important. Interview 100 successful people and find
if money and title really made them feel important inside. You might
find 1 or 2 who will say yes, but this is a false belief. We are important
because we are here.
We all have the same amount of source energy inside of us. Call it
"God", or "energy"or "goodness" - whatever
resonates with you. I believe that as physical beings, we are on the
leading edge of consciousness and our job is to create. We create
by being in touch with our source and choosing actions in alignment
with our joy. The only thing that you will take with you when you
cross over into the spiritual world is your expansion of consciousness.
You will not take any physical possession or title or award. You will
only take your soul and the wisdom it has acquired during this physical
manifestation.
Belief #5: Security: I will be secure if I have a good-paying
job. If you know anyone that has been fired, laid-off, or downsized
you know that this is not true. Yet, so many of us want to play it
safe. We let our fears guide our decisions rather than taking risks
and following our bliss. When you have a job, you are at the mercy
of your employer. You may be laid-off with your entire department
or fired because a superior doesn't like you. It will be random and
out of your control. True security comes from being your own boss.
Belief #4: Enjoyment: I will enjoy working in the corporate
world. I chose a job in strategy consulting because I was bored with
all of my other jobs - both in the public and private sectors. I thought
- now this is something that will challenge me. To get a job in consulting
I needed to get an MBA - so I did. But I did not enjoy strategy consulting.
It was intellectually challenging but I didn't enjoy the corporate
environment. It seemed too artificial - not real. I couldn't be my
true self - I could only reveal the smart, logical and masculine part.
I wasn't having fun putting on my corporate game face and playing
the game. It is possible to enjoy a corporate job if the work and
environment are in alignment with your true calling. Unfortunately,
it is rare.
Take a moment to reflect upon the above beliefs. How did you choose a corporate job? Were you following a belief or several beliefs? Or were you following your heart and intuition? Do you still have this belief or have your beliefs changed but your circumstances not changed?
Before you take action, work on replacing your old beliefs with new, positive ones that serve you better. Meditation, journaling, and positive affirmations are good ways to control your belief system.
Find out how to break free from the corporate world. Debra Thorsen is a happy corporate escapee who helps individuals create real wealth and happiness without 9 to 5 jobs. Visit Fearless Guides for free tips on career change.
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