tailfins
10-30-2014, 09:03 AM
It says the worst thing you can do is fail to grow.
Stew argues that simply trying to achieve "work/life balance" is not nearly enough. Instead, you have to choose the people who matter to you, and actively seek opportunities for change that you haven’t seen before. This happens, he says, when you shift your frame of reference to thinking about not just what’s good for you, or your career, or your family, or your community. Instead, you need to look at all four together.
He observes, "It’s a paradox: leading the life you want requires striving to help others."
"It’s crystal-clear to me, 30 years down the road, that you can't be successful without continually cultivating the skills that take you further," said Stew.
I also read into it this: Don't waste time trying to please people who don't matter, even if it's a boss. You'll eventually wind up with a boss worth caring about. I will add another personal note to this: I'm not an empathetic person. But I know someone who is "stuck" is in a sense broken. I'm the worst person to talk to if you just want to "vent". I challenge someone who is stuck to actually fix the problem and help where I can.
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/article/20141029171354-36792-the-worst-thing-you-can-do-in-your-career
Stew argues that simply trying to achieve "work/life balance" is not nearly enough. Instead, you have to choose the people who matter to you, and actively seek opportunities for change that you haven’t seen before. This happens, he says, when you shift your frame of reference to thinking about not just what’s good for you, or your career, or your family, or your community. Instead, you need to look at all four together.
He observes, "It’s a paradox: leading the life you want requires striving to help others."
"It’s crystal-clear to me, 30 years down the road, that you can't be successful without continually cultivating the skills that take you further," said Stew.
I also read into it this: Don't waste time trying to please people who don't matter, even if it's a boss. You'll eventually wind up with a boss worth caring about. I will add another personal note to this: I'm not an empathetic person. But I know someone who is "stuck" is in a sense broken. I'm the worst person to talk to if you just want to "vent". I challenge someone who is stuck to actually fix the problem and help where I can.
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/article/20141029171354-36792-the-worst-thing-you-can-do-in-your-career