Renee Jackman, MA, LMHCA
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Deep Dive
Career Guide

Career Destiny

5/21/2018

 
Work conceived of as a vocation, sometimes named a “calling,” is a way of seeing your career as a meaningful destiny.  The word vocation, like the word vocal, links it to the concept of a voice—a voice that calls to us to turn toward our destiny.  If we listen to the call, we gain for ourselves a sense of direction.
 
But does life speak to us in this way?  Consider how most of us have a story about stumbling into a current or former job.
  • An unhappy attorney: “Art was not even on my radar until a friend casually said to me: ‘Hey, you like art. Why not look for a job there?”
  • A recent college graduate: “My mother’s friend needed extra help for an upcoming conference, and I needed a job, and here I am five years later working as an Event Planner at a marketing firm.”
  • An IT manager: “My boss’s boss called me in and told me he wanted to transfer me to head a relatively new department that was struggling under its current manager. It felt like a step backward.  And yet, in the end the job proved to be a turning point in my career that set the stage for everything positive that followed, including opportunities I never could have envisioned.”
 
Most people agree that unpredictable events have played an important, sometimes huge, part in their careers.  In fact, it is hard to believe that anyone would seriously claim that events they could not have planned had no influence on their career direction. 
 
That this unpredictability is so prevalent, so common, seems to say that there is something natural about the way that life “speaks” to us and gives us hints and prods about which way to go.
 
Author Thomas Moore proposes in his book A Life at Work:
The question is not so much does the world give us a direction, but are we able to read the world for its information? We tend to look at the surface of events and deal with them practically.  An alternative is to see events as symbols, images, and signs.
 
He explains how the material world can speak to us and we have only to listen and consider what the signs are indicating.  We can use the signs to evaluate our work lives.  He says:
 
For example, if you are failing in a particular line of work, your difficulty may not mean that you are lacking or at fault, but that you are in the wrong profession.
 
“Reading the world” then is the challenge.  Could your unpredictable events be a sign for you?  It is the imagination that we bring to our work lives that is so important to the quality of our lives and ability to hear the calling.

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