How to Answer Your Call in Mid-Life Craig Nathanson, The Vocational Coach™.
Excerpt from Mid-Life Passion: Discover
and FINALLY do the work you love! (coming in 2005)
Hank Bochenski’s story
proves it is never too late to walk away from a life you feel trapped in and do
something that you really love.
Hank spent 30 years in demanding senior positions
at large high-tech companies. By the time he went home each day, he felt like
all the blood had been drained out of him.
Hank’s real passion was his collection of more than
1,000 movies. He had recently spent hours converting the collection from VHS to
DVD, a process he enjoyed. One day his wife walked by as he worked on this
project and said, “It’s too bad you can’t make money doing this.” Before his wife’s
offhand remark, he hadn’t considered that he could do this full time.
He did some research and found a company called
Home Video Studio Inc., in Indianapolis. HVS
offers 21 services, including DVD transfers, DVD duplications, home movie
transfers, photo-video keepsakes, sports scholarship videos and videotape
repair.
Hank and his wife did some due diligence and
decided that this was a perfect opportunity for them and they went ahead and got
into the video duplication business. And to top it all off, Hank's studio is in
his own home--no more 1.5-hour each way daily commute.
What Happens in Mid-Life?
Mid-life is a time of challenges and crossroads.
Often we re-evaluate our relationships, become more concerned about our health
or worry about whether we are as financially secure as we should be. The
biggest challenges in mid-life often involve our careers, and more centrally,
whether our careers are providing the fulfillment we crave, or are simply
exhausting us physically and emotionally. In mid-life, fulfillment and meaning
begin to compete with paychecks and perks, and the paycheck and perks usually
win.
Answering the Call to Vocational Passion
Before you can take action to change the course of
your life and pursue your vocational passion, it is critical to take an
inventory of your life and what is really important. You must begin by
understanding what is missing. You need to have a dream and a plan for
achieving it.
Start by making a list of the things that are
missing in your life. Is it a passion from your youth that you can never find
time to pursue? Is it music, a sport, writing, cooking, activism,
entrepreneurship, working with kids? It doesn’t matter, as long as it is something
you long to do, and have enough passion to do it full time.
You need to understand not only where your passion
is, but also where your strengths lie. Make a list of the things you are
passionate about, and then narrow the list to those items that present an
opportunity to generate income. An interest in rock climbing suggests opening a
store that sells climbing equipment. Perhaps some past volunteer work with
disabled kids leads to earning a certificate to teach full time.
Once you’ve narrowed your list and have matched
your aptitudes and interests, it’s time to take a good look at your support
network. Do you know people who care about what you are passionate about? If
not, what organizations or social networks could you tap into to build a better
personal network to help you make your big vocational change?
Begin the Journey with a Lighter Backpack
Finally, you need to think about money--how it
comes in and where it goes.
Treat your money with more respect. Making better
choices in how you spend your money will make it easier to free yourself to
change the direction of your life.
Examine ways to “lighten your backpack.” Do you
really need 100 cable channels? How many shoes, credit cards and watches does
it take to make you happy? Would life be any more difficult if you drove a used
Toyota
instead of a brand new Lexus?
These are the kinds of questions that Hank Bochenski and his family asked themselves as they made the
difficult but ultimately rewarding decision to “throw it all away” for a
simpler yet more fulfilling lifestyle. Hank is much happier. He is having fun
every day. And while his income may be more modest than before, his family is
living comfortably. His pursuit of vocational passion has cost him little
materially, yet the spiritual dividends have been immense.
© Craig Nathanson 2005.
Excerpted from Mid-Life Passion: Discover
and FINALLY do the work you love! All rights reserved. Reprinted by
permission of the author.
Craig Nathanson is The Vocational
Coach™ and the author of the new book, P
Is For Perfect: Your Perfect Vocational Day by Bookcoach
Press and the publisher of the free Ezine,
‘’Vocational passion in mid-life’’. Craig believes the world works a little
better when we do the work we love. Craig Nathanson
helps those in mid-life carry this out! Visit his on-line community at http://www.thevocationalcoach.com