Sunday, May 31, 2020
Why Work Is Supposed To Be Easy
Why Work Is Supposed To Be Easy Expert Advice > How to believe its really possible Why Work Is Supposed To Be Easy * Fact: Successful people focus on their strengths. Marianne Cantwell takes a closer look at why the concept of 'hard work' could be holding you back from finding your perfect career. Beethoven was a failure. His career as a legal secretary never took off. He was ok at it, but not the best in the world. Every Monday morning was a struggle. But he couldnât quit. Heâd worked hard for years to get there. Sure, it wasnât his calling, but it was all right. Another day another dollar, right? Of course, thatâs not true. Beethoven was known for his musical talents â" but what if he was born in another family or era and if he never focused on those skills? Heâd most likely have been another average guy doing a mediocre job in an unsatisfied way. People are successful for a reason â" a pretty simple one. They're really good at something. And they do it. Because theyâre really good at it, they do it better than anyone else. They stand out. It might be a skill, an approach, whatever, but they stick to it and it pays off. Whatâs more, they love it. So why arenât we all tapping into what weâre âoutstandinglyâ good at and happily doing it? In my experience, it all comes back to two things: The myth of âhardâ From a young age we are told a great big lie: âIf it feels good itâs probably bad for you.â Another variation is âNothing worth doing was ever easy.â Or âIf it tastes bad, itâs good for you.â Inour Anglo-Saxon-Protestant psychology, things that feel hard, uncomfortable, challenging are thought to be good. For example,we associate healthy lifestyles with blandness and discipline,so, unlike inother cultures, a healthy diet is harsh and about denial. Now, I'm going to say one thing that is vital to understand if you are going to achieve your ideal career: Easy Is Good. Donât get me wrong, easy is not the same as lazy. Itâs not about avoiding work. Easy is that feeling when you do something and feel energised, time flies, and whatever youâre doing definitely doesnât feel like work. Itâs something youâd do for free and you love it. The things you're best at are those you find easiest. For me that feeling comes when I'm writing or speaking in front of audiences (yes, I know, thatâs weird). For others it comes when analysing a complex piece of data (no, really). For others it comes when combining colours to make a room perfect. Whatever that ideal âeasyâ thing is for you, hereâs a clue: you probably canât think of it right now. You're likely to be thinking about the things you've worked really hard to get âgoodâ at but still donât enjoy. If that's the case, why canât you think of that thing that is easy and âjoyfulâ for you? Hereâs why: The dominance of âaverageâ Richard Branson is an awful organiser. He couldnât be a finisher-completer to save his life⦠hey a new idea! Oh yes, and he flits on to a new idea before finishing the last⦠ooh, a new airline! You get the picture: heâs not going to be a world-class PA anytime soon. Buthereâs his secret: Richard Branson doesnât try to be the most organised kid on the block. He doesnât try to be a finisher-completer. He knows that he could do those things, but he would be average at them. Instead, he put himself in an environment where what he DOES do best (get great ideas, think big-picture, and be a marketing genius, among other things) is what he does most of the time. As we all know, he does these very, very well. This approach of focusing on our strengths and only âmanagingâ our weaknesses is one most of us donât take. At school, the aim was to get you up to average. You got tuition for your weaker subjects. Your focus was getting those Cs to Bs and Bs to As. Your weaknesses were combated â" but what happened to your strengths? Not much. This may be the way to a neat report card at school, but it's not the way to happiness or success in the real world. Here, most people stick in âschool modeâ for the rest of their career. They waste time and energy lamenting their weaknesses, trying to improve them and letting their strengths slide by in the meantime. Successful people donât ever allow themselves to be in an environment where their strengths donât take centre stage. If Richard Branson hadnât been brave enough to toss out our societyâs work ethic and obsession with âgetting up to averageâ he would have most likely had a mediocre career being totally scatty in an office. His boss would have written âdevelopment pointsâ about his lack of focus and organisation. He would have felt frustrated and constrained about the need to do things by the book. He probably wouldnât own his own island. (Note:This isnât a recipe for turning into Richard Branson or Beethoven overnight, but it'll probably mean that Monday mornings feel awholelot better.) So, three questions for you: What could you do if you focussed on what makes you âgreatâ? What would happen if you spent time identifying and developing what comes easily and naturally to you? What would happen if you stopped berating yourself for not being âgood enoughâ at other things? Let us know in thecomments below.
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