Midlife_Career_Change_Can_Feel_Like_Getting_a_Divorce
| Midlife Career Change Can Feel Like Getting a Divorce
Most of us are aware that we need to grieve the death of a close
friend, relative or favorite pet. We are beginning to learn that
other events -- relocation, divorce, illness -- can also be
experienced as loss.
Losing a professional-level career can also be a source of
grief, anger and frustration. Starting a business is a death as
well as a birth. You may feel as though you are getting a
divorce after a twenty-year marriage. Here's why.
1. Sometimes the career leaves you. The field wants "younger
people." Or you have to change in ways that violate your sense
of self.
2. Sometimes you leave a career that seems perfectly wonderful
and fulfilling to those on the outside. "The money's so good,"
your mother says, "and it's not as if you're scrubbing floors
all day. Can't you just hang in there and pretend you like it?"
3. You feel disloyal. After all, you've gained a lot from this
career. For the rest of your life, you will view the world
through the lens created by your training and experience. You
will question assumptions, criticize, challenge, argue, prepare,
organize, or negotiate.
4. Friends take sides. After you leave, some former colleagues
no longer return your calls. Others try to engage you in a
rousing session of "Aren't they horrible," which you don't want
either.
5. Those left behind begin to feel abandoned. Are you leaving
for a new love, an opportunity that will be livelier, more
exciting, and yes, even sexier? Worst case: you're leaving for a
new career that your former associates find entirely unsuitable.
6. You have started projects that you will be unable to finish
because your new life has no room for them. Anyway, without your
former big-name affiliation, you have no credibility to raise
them to a level you can present or sell.
7. Your new identity gains you access to new and exciting
places, but people treat you differently. You feel naked without
the old title on your business card.
8. The rules of the game have changed since the last time you
were unattached. And this time around, you're less interested in
those "how to get lucky" sessions.
9. You spend more time in the gym. You spend hours walking the
dog. You try new hair styles, dare to enter an art gallery, read
your first self-help book and consider talking to a professional
who bears little resemblance to Jennifer Melfi.
10. You're starting to think, "Being on my own for the rest of
my life may not be such a bad thing."
About the author:
Cathy Goodwin, Ph.D., author of Making the Big Move, helps
midlife professionals navigate career and business transitions.
"How Smart People Can Derail Their Transitions" complimentary
Special Report http://www.cathygoodwin.com/subscribe.html .
Contact: http://www.cathygoodwin.com/feedback.html Phone:
505-534-4194
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