Tag Archives: transition

Transition’s Enabler….

As you look forward into the New Year have you been considering transition?  Maybe you’re rebounding from a 2013 job loss but you’re questioning if you want to get back into the same thing.  Maybe you’re someone who has prioritized other’s needs over your own and now find yourself ready to re-prioritize.  Maybe you are realizing that you need to regroup because your long sought after career choice isn’t all that you thought it might be.   Whatever the drivers transition simply represents a point in time when we’re faced with a decision: to change or to transition.   Which path will you choose?

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Transition’s Pre-work….

“At the beginning of the year I was looking for  a job,” shared a woman who was kind enough to talk with me about her transition.  “I was in a miserable situation where I cried and hoped I’d get into a car accident on the way to work so I wouldn’t have to go that day.”   What was going on?  By her description she was in a highly charged, negative work environment.  She felt irrelevant there despite a master’s degree and a heart ready-to-engage.   These work conditions affected everything.  Her job. Her relationship with her husband.  Every facet of her life.  Ever been there?

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Another friend shared with me the particulars about her three transitions.  “I just can’t do what I am doing anymore,” she said as a replay of the self-talk that characterized her feelings when she decided to begin.

While these stories are greatly excerpted I wonder if you sense any similarities?  From my perch I hear each woman talking about getting to an end, a breaking point, before initiating a transition.

What are the prerequisites for transition?  Should we adopt the model set out by these ladies?  Full sprint until we reach a breaking point?

I hope not.  My transition has taught me that at least two factors are worth keeping at the ready always…

Stay in touch with your ‘possible’ in whatever fashion you define possible.    I remember an incredibly buoyant woman, a tenured marketing professional, who attended one of my Focus Groups.    In her transition she was looking for work but her objective was broader than a paycheck.  She sought re-alignment between her passions and her daily pursuits.

“I’ve been doing marketing forever.  I like what I do.  Am I passionate about it?  No.  And I need to rediscover that passion and align that with my skills.  And it could be that I reaffirm that I want to stay in what I’m doing.  That’s OK.  But I have to find that again in myself in order to really be successful at job searching and ultimately at whatever position I get.  And that’s a very uncomfortable place to be in.  What am I going to do next?”

This woman committed full-time to her discovery.   Terrific but not required.  Can you give one hour a month to rekindle the sightlines to your passions?   The real risk lies in extinguishing our passion’s voice.  One hour?

Fail a little, often.  “I wouldn’t do that,” remarked a friend as I detailed for her a rocky last few weeks.   I was telling her about my grueling month leading up to the holidays.  During that time I’d received a string of ‘no’s’ on one of my favorite projects.   It was punishing and heartbreaking and oddly motivational.

Her remark?   I took it to mean that rejection and failure just weren’t her bailiwick.   Lucky for her she isn’t currently in transition.

Failure is a constant companion of transition.  My new definition of transition is a decision to re-assess our underlying assumptions when faced with the need to change. The assumptions include our identity, our values,  our capacity and our sense of purpose.  At its core transition requires us to test out these new assumptions again and again.  By its very nature, iterative.

Why fail a little?  It builds up our capacity to reach.  In the late 90’s I started a tech company that received venture capital financing.  It was awesome.  The less told story is that it wasn’t my first start-up.  The start-up that preceded this swanky tech company failed.   The earlier one had to shut down after two years.   I think I cried for an entire weekend once the decision was made.   Despondent?  An understatement.

It took a while to regroup after that event but my ability to manage risk and failure was greatly expanded the next time I stepped to the plate.  Can you find small ways to increase your fail tolerance?

In this season of resolutions and great beginnings can you commit yourself to these two guidelines?  Search for your passion’s voice and fail, a little.  My guess is that this is the only investment you’ll make in 2014 which is guaranteed to earn you exponential returns.

Copyright © 2014 NovoFemina.com.  All rights reserved. No content on this site may be reused in any fashion without written permission from NovoFemina.com.

Beginnings…..

“What is transition?” asked a woman who was giving me feedback on one of my project’s just prior to the end of last year.  Her question was sincere.  It’s a question that I get often.  It always gives me pause.  Transition.  How would you define it? Continue reading

A gift for you this holiday…

“What will be the fullest expression of your greatness?”  Sounds jarring, doesn’t it?  It isn’t meant to be.  The New Yorker’s Philip Gourevitch stated in a Postscript piece eulogizing Nelson Mandela, “It was in the negotiations of apartheid’s end that Mandela’s greatness found its fullest expression.”  The instant I read the sentence I loved it.  Why?  I believe that every person, no exception, has a greatness quotient.   Our toughest work?  Bringing it forth. Continue reading

Conjuring our humanity…..

“We love you! We love you!” recalled Audrey Zabin in an interview on WBUR’s Kind World Series, “Remembering Karim: A Lifetime of Kindness.”   She was summoning the words of a Lebanese gentleman, Karim, who was an attendant at a nondescript gas station in Cambridge, MA.  Karim was an incredible man – part attendant, part therapist, part chef.   A deep listener.   Patrons at the gas station offered to help when Karim faced what would be a losing a battle with cancer.   A rent-free apartment soon appeared, one that was more accessible to the station.  So too, the funds required to return his body to Lebanon where his wife and children still remained.  Are there many people you know who would garner such support from relative strangers? Continue reading

Holiday gifts….

“What are you getting out of it?” offered a Focus Group participant.  She was describing her rubric, the screening technique that she’d adopted to view her options.  This slant was a new non-negotiable for her, designed specifically for her transition. “There was a time,” she said, “when I was getting divorced.  I had a serious financial situation.  I needed to keep the job.”  Now, years later, she described her quick decision to take a ‘package,’ ending a multi-decade marketing career inside a large employer.   Her adult siblings became thoroughly unglued by her decision.  To her it was an obvious choice.  The only choice.  Does her calculus hold true for you?  What are you getting – or giving this season? Continue reading

Transition’s scope

“What kind of transition?  Career? Or a job?,” said a business acquaintance of mine during a conversation we had earlier this week.  I was giving him an update about my work.  He seemed genuinely interested in the blog.   But he couldn’t reconcile the notion of transition outside of job-related issues.   Ever notice how many people go there?  Maybe jobs are safe ground.   Objective.  Sometimes opaque.  I should mention that he is a marketer.    Market segmentation is his world.   Is transition only about jobs?   Or is it broader?  What exactly does transition entail?  Continue reading

Defining moments…

“Find a way,” shared Diana Nyad in a recent interview.  Nyad is the 60+ year old distance swimmer who recently completed a historic swim between Cuba and The United States.  The phrase, it seems, served as her mantra for close to 53 hours in the water.    She went on to offer that it allowed her to, “get through this one minute.”   A minute that could have held a cramp or a pain or an emotion.  Her swim was exactly that  – a series of minutes.  Could your transition benefit from such a simple perspective? Continue reading

Options?

‘It has a lot to do with how women see their options,’ observed a leader of gender studies at an esteemed Boston university.  She participated as an industry expert in last spring’s Research Jam.  This remark was in response to our discussion about when & why women choose to transition.  Her perspective was incredibly simple.   Do women perceive that they have options?  Some do.  Many others don’t.  In your world what role do options play?  What would happen if you expanded your aperture for options just a bit? Continue reading

An elusive identity…..

“I can be anything I want to be,” said a focus group participant in a heavy tone.  This woman, most recently a CFO, went on to say, “it is freeing and confusing because I can be anything I want to be.”   All in attendance politely laughed – revealing their own discomfort with this common divide.   She was no stranger to transition.  Early in her career she had resigned from a tenured professorship in The Classics to take a role in finance.  Her remark made we wonder, is identity the holy grail of transition?

Identity or in my transition’s parlance creating a ‘highly personal, self-created identity’ serves as a fundamental core to the work of transition.  It’s simple.    Isn’t it?

What do I want to do? Have you ever asked yourself that question and struggled with the answer?   I remember being cowed by it early on.

Immediately after I left Iron Mountain eager friends inquired of me, ‘so what do you want to do?’  While I had some vague notions I couldn’t honestly answer the question.  I’d say something like, ‘I’m consulting.’   I was doing projects so the answer wasn’t dishonest.  But it was puffery.  At least it was a response.  Inside I was despondent.

Of all the elements of transition it took me the longest to get my arms around this one.  How do you re-frame identity?

This week I stumbled onto some historically significant perspectives on women’s identity.   A book caught my eye as I was running through the lobby of our local library en route to a program with my daughter.   There perched on a display celebrating its 50th anniversary of publication was Betty Friedan’s The Feminine Mystique.  When I saw it I quickly reasoned that any self-respecting advocate for women’s development needed to read it.  So much for their beautiful display…..

The book shares Friedan’s conclusions from research she conducted in the 50’s and 60’s that revealed widespread unhappiness among women.   In the book she argued that women’s unhappiness was caused by and large from their lack of identity outside of roles determined by biology or anatomy.  She was also hyper critical of the media.  The feminine mystique, in her mind, was a false notion created largely by the media that women could be fulfilled simply (or only) through roles like housewife or mother.   The media – it seems – espoused that fulfillment could be gained via ownership of canary yellow consumer durables and other hollow concepts.

House Beautiful Kitchen's of the 1950's

House Beautiful’s Kitchens of the 1950’s

Said Friedan, “I think that this has been the unknown heart of the women’s problem in America for a long time, this lack of private image.  Public images that defy reason and have very little to do with women themselves have had the power to shape too much of their lives.  These images would not have such power, if women were not suffering from a crisis of identity.” (Mystique, pg75)

So, what do you do when you finally realize that ‘you can do anything you’d like?’

My transition hasn’t produced an answer to this question…but it has provided me with some insight into the process required to get to that answer.    Here are some actions you might consider if you’re just getting started…

a) Inventory that which you find joyful: It doesn’t matter if you are 22 or 52. The very first step is to list the things that have really truly made you happy. What’s captivated your attention and your heart?  A game?  A job?  A moment?  An achievement?  No one else’s list will look like yours – so skip the comparisons.

b) Work the list:  Can your list be ranked?  Can you talk out loud about it to anyone?  Book group?  Work colleague?  Old friend?   New acquaintance?  Can you extend the ideas?  Maybe use a trick contained in my favorite ‘what if’ tool, Harvard Business School’s personal elevator pitch builder.  It asks you to answer the who, what, why and goal for yourself.   It took me the better part of a year to understand how much I needed to work the list. Ideas on a page weren’t enough.  Exploring them was the real start.

c) Test & Re-test:  Investigate the ideas that have grown out of A & B.  The objective is to validate or invalidate an idea before you make a huge commitment to it.  There are loads of ways to do this…a Skype networking call, reading a series of articles, listening to a TED talk.

It can be done one night a week for months or over the course of a few short days.  The only rules?  Eliminate ‘bet the farm’ type commitments.   Break it down into parts.  Learn from processing each step.  Integrate what you learn and then, re-test.

Even today two gates challenge my forward progress with this cycle.  Both are trumpeted from a megaphone inside my head.   One sounds something like, ‘I could never to that.’   The other?   A rigid filter of what constitutes viable work.  Have you ever encountered either of these?

The focus group participant who offered her pithy and powerful question on identity was clear on her transition’s trigger:  boredom.  My guess is that you’ll have the courage to look beyond the canary yellow accoutrements for your kitchen.   The real question?  Can you step beyond the fear, uncertainty, guilt, and yes, maybe even boredom, to really define an identity that is solely yours?

Only you know if you have the courage to take that first step….

Copyright © 2013 NovoFemina.com.  All rights reserved. No content on this site may be reused in any fashion without written permission from NovoFemina.com.