Be a doer.

August 26, 2009 at 2:00 pm (athletes, careers, future, goals, Jobs, Money)

I have yet to meet a person who has a hard time coming up with things they’d like to do, be, own, master, learn, etc. However, we all know more than a handful of people who are constantly talking about these desires without taking any action to get them closer to those goals. Our world is not without wanters, it is without doers.

Growing up one of my least favorite conversations with my Dad would start with, ‘who do you want to be’? He would proceed to drill me about the type of person I desire to be. My future career path. What does my life look like five years down the road? Ten? Twenty?

After all, my Dad’s job is essentially to take incredibly talented, hardworking athletes and make them better. He pushes even the Marvin Harrisons and the Reggie Waynes of the athletic world to achieve. So, for a living he motivates, tweaks, and pushes. This is a skill he also used/uses in parenting the three of us girls.

He always finished this conversation however, with a concept I’ve come to appreciate. That is he would always follow the drills about who I want to be with this loaded question, ‘Now what are you doing to get there’? Ah ha. This is where wanters move over to join the ranks of the doers. What are YOU doing to get where you want to be? This question places a great deal of the responsibility for your success on the rightful owner, you.

Now don’t get me wrong, this is an incredibly frustrating line of questioning. Especially when I was 16 and I felt like I shouldn’t be expected to know what I wanted my 40-year-old-life to look like. After all, wasn’t high school enough to handle at one time? I dreaded those conversations like you wouldn’t believe and have only recently since being out on my own, come to appreciate what those questions lead me to do. A. take responsibility and realize that ultimately – nothing is handed to you & B. if you’re not thinking about your future than your present isn’t purposeful.

There is much value in living in the present. However, don’t let enjoying today keep you from seeing tomorrow. The work you are doing now should be propelling you towards the future that you desire. Are you with me?

I tell my friends and students who haven’t entered the working world yet that when you consider your major in college, the internships you take, and your post-graduation job make sure that you’re building a life, not just a career. If you want to get married and have lots of kids and be a stay-at-home-mom (as many of my girlfriends do) then pick a career that will allow you to contribute to your family should you need too, without working full time. If you want to travel the world than either pick a job that will take you around the world, or a career that will enable you financially, to do so on your own.

Often you see 20-somethings floundering about in the their careers thinking they ‘just need a job’ but the truth is you should interview your future employers as much or more than they interview you. You do not want to be the employee who’s ever bouncing from job to job and the quality of your work will suffer if you take a job just for the money. My disclaimer to my previous statement though, is that you sometimes you do what you must to survive. For some, that will mean working just for the money at a given point in time. It happens. But as much as you can control it, always be working towards the future you want.

A close friend of mine recently made some life changes that may have seemed on the surface to be taking a step back career wise. Her goal is to make it to New York City as a writer however, and what could be perceived as a ‘step back’ was really a step towards where she wants to be long-term. She could have continued in the direction she was headed and worked her way up within the company she was currently with but it wasn’t going to lead her where she wanted to go.

Your twenties are for bold moves. Going after you want whole heartedly and not being afraid to fall on your face a few times in the process. More than likely, you won’t. If you do, use it as motivation. In the roughest patch of my life I kept my eye on the prize and used what I was unhappy with in my life to fuel my fire to achieve what I wanted. That is ultimately how I ended up in Tampa, back where I wanted to be.

Even when you get what you want, keep the attitude of forward thinking. When you land the job you desire or you make it to the city you want to live in, that doesn’t mean you don’t have to be considering your next move. Being content doesn’t mean being stagnant!..

Who do you want to be? Now tell me, what are you doing to get there?

Love,
B

Also if you haven’t already, please watch the video of my Daddy from my previous entry.

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Author?

February 21, 2009 at 4:33 pm (bucket list, childhood, future, grandpa, writing)

If you’ve seen the movie A Walk to Remember then you’re probably already familiar with the concept of what my Dad calls “a bucket list”.  These are your most grandiose goals. The few chosen items that you want to achieve, ultimately before you “kick the bucket”.

My Dad once asked my Mom what was on her list and then proceeded to say that only a few of them were bucket list material.  My Mom is so selfless that most of hers were things she wanted to do for other people.  Namely, for us girls.  Some of them were small goals of things she wanted to try or learn.  
Dad never told me what his were now that I think about it, I’ll have to ask.
So what’s on mine?…
I remember when it felt like I would have truly lived when I got a drivers license or finally graduated high school.  Those felt like the ultimate goals at different points in life.  Then it was graduating college and finding a career.  Moving away to a new city on my own.
Not very grandiose, I know.  But as we grow, our dreams should grow with us.  We learned to see beyond the next year or two and think ahead to what we want our lives to look like.  That’s something my Dad would always ask me, “What do you want your life to look like?”…I hated it growing up because I felt like it was such a loaded question. It was also alway followed with, “what are you doing right now to make that happen?”.  I wasn’t ready to think about forever – I just wanted to survive my next set of finals.
Let is suffice to say that I truly am my Daddy’s girl because these 2 questions have come to haunt me in my new young adult life.  Ask any of my close friends – the ones I talk to for hours weekly.  They will tell you I’ve pondered these aloud to them and asked them the same questions with some regularity.  What I love about those same friends is that as we figure this out together we are growing and pushing each other through this together.
I’m not going to share my bucket list now – in part because it’s always under construction.  But my boss told me this week that he thinks I should write a book.  He said my love for telling a good story would make for a throughly entertaining book, even if only about hilarious moments in my own life from childhood, through college, and now as a 23 year old sex ed teacher!
My Grandpa always wanted me to write a book.  He loved my stories (even ones about him).  I started a book once when I was 10 at his prompting, but to this day I’m not sure where that went too.  He asks me every Christmas when he visits where that is – and when I’m going to finish it.  But I never lost sight of that dream of his for me.  He has always been the biggest fan of my stories.  Laughing even as he tried to defend himself against my exaggerations.
And so, to my list I’m adding today that someday I want to be an author of more than just a blog.
Love,
B

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