Make A Living Doing Work You Love.

Tag Archives | happiness

How To Find A Job You Like

© Alan Cleaver

Did your job turn you into a clockwatcher? Do you count the minutes to freedom, only to return to the same boring job the very next morning?

I was there, too. I used to hate my job, which led me to hate my entire life.  In fact, hating our work is a problem of epidemic proportions.

80% of us dislike our jobs. Four out of every five of us wake up every weekday morning only to go to a job that bores us, annoys us, and brings us no satisfaction.

What can you do about it? How can you find a job that you actually want to go to? How do you find a job that you like?

Sometimes, the solution is easier to see when we look at the problem from the outside.

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By on April 11, 2013 in career, happiness

The Twists and Turns Of Finding A Career You Love

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“Come to the edge, He said. They said, We are afraid.
Come to the edge, He said. They came.
He pushed them… and they flew.”
~Guillaume Apollinaire

From the moment that I met my best friend at school, Karen, she told me that she was going to be a doctor. She seemed to arrive at this decision with little need for reflection or soul-searching; she simply knew that she wanted to be a doctor, and that was that. Not even those treacherous 18-hour shifts at medical school, her dislike of seeing blood, or going into massive debt to fund her study made her question her career choice.

I, however, never had that clarity. My career path has been as undulating, meandering and seemingly haphazard as the most challenging of rally circuits. I have never even had that “eureka” moment that people who have found their life’s calling often talk about.

Instead, my journey to finding work I love came through a series of false starts, well-intentioned (but ill-thought-through) decisions, uncomfortable realizations, and a lot of courage.

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By on March 25, 2013 in career

Finding Myself: From Programmer To Singer, Writer & Researcher

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At the start of my journey, I often felt that pursuing your passion was a privilege of the rich. Trouble is, my family was anything but rich.

I come from a time and place where material goods were valued not because of greed or gluttony, but simply because there wasn’t enough to go around.

My grandfather on my mother’s side fought in the second world war, his unmoving glass eye a constant reminder of what he had suffered. My grandfather on my father’s side, a Holocaust survivor, was left a homeless orphan when the Nazis shot his entire family and took away all their possessions. They both knew what it was like to have nothing to eat.

By the time I came around, times were better, but I still remember the long lineups for bread. My mother would stay up all night stuffing pickles into jars so that there would be enough food for winter. Although both of my parents worked from morning till night, we were barely making ends meet.

This was life in the eighties in the Eastern European city of Gomel, where I was born.

Since I immigrated twice before the age of twelve, I spent the better part of my childhood living in government subsidized housing and wearing my older sister’s used clothes.

If someone would have told me back then that money isn’t all that important, I would have laughed.

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By on March 4, 2013 in career