Author: Mary Ila Ward

  • A Final Word on Talents and Passions

    A Final Word on Talents and Passions

    A WAY TO AVOID BEING MISERABLE

    Coupled with understanding your talents, discovering what your passionate about is a critical piece in determining career direction.  I find, though, that many people forego incorporating their passion and even their talents into career choices because they don’t think they can make money doing it or they are afraid they will fail.   While I’m an advocate for understanding the marketplace and the demand for certain skills before making career choices, I also believe that people putting aside their gifts and passions end up leaving themselves in very undesirable states.

    Consider this quote in A Clearing Season by Sarah Parsons that expresses just this issue:

    “In The Artist’s Way, Julia Cameron describes the phenomenon of the ‘blocked’ artist, a person with natural creative gifts who, for various reasons, does not use them.  The blocked person may fear using his or her gifts, thinking that being an artist would mean financial ruin, a tumultuous lifestyle, or painful failure and rejection.  Unfortunately, choosing not to use one’s gifts is like choosing not to experience one’s emotions- the inner reality remains the same and continues to beg for expression.  The obstacles preventing self-expression create distortions in the blocked person’s life, leading to anger, jealously or unhappiness.  The blocked artists may pretend that he has no desire to be an artist himself, but subconsciously he envies others’ choices to do things that he himself would like to do.

    What we do to make a living affects every facet our lives.  Pursing something that expresses who you are is a critical piece in life, not just work, satisfaction.   My encouragement is to find something that you can make a living at that allows you to express who you are.  If that isn’t possible in the short term, it’s important to make sure you find opportunities for self-expression in some aspect of your life.

  • The Focus on Women and Personal Leadership

    DO WE REALLY WANT TO HAVE IT ALL?

    I’ve been overwhelmed the last few weeks with the emphasis in the media and through random conversations about the focus on women.  Women and their choice to stay at home or not to stay at home, to feed Cheetos for breakfast or fix homemade heart shaped pancakes instead, to take a job that demands more travel or not.  About women and equality from the extremes of equal pay to the need for basic human rights for women. Women having it all or wanting it all, or “leaning in” for it all, or building a nursery onto their office in order to have it all.

    All the Fuss

    Here’s just a sampling of things that have been brought to my attention in these last few weeks related to women:

    Jimmy Carter’s “Losing my Religion for Equality” about how he has made a decision to leave the Southern Baptist Convention because of women’s equality issues.

    Lean In: Women, Work, and the Will to Lead   A book recommended to me by a co-worker written by the COO of Facebook, Sheryl Sandberg.

    Working Women Know Your Value an article a friend sent me just after she had finished telling me that she doesn’t charge enough for her side business as well as how she was shocked at how much a friend charged her for baby clothes she had purchased from her.  The article starts off with the dramatics quote I often feel like a high-class prostitute, I just don’t charge like one. Call girls seem to know their black book value, or at least their madams do. But sadly, many professional working women don’t get or demand the compensation they deserve.

    Or the Blog Cheetos for Breakfast: A Letter to Young Mothers that my mom posted on my Facebook page a few weeks back.

    One thing is for sure, the focus on women is everywhere, and it is often about the choices we make. Can you imagine headlines and blog posts like these above focused on men? “Lean In: MEN, Work and the Will to Lead”? “Working MEN Know Your Value”?  “”Cheetos for Breakfast: A Letter to Young FATHERS.”? Yea right. And there is harsh criticism on either side of every debate about a woman and the choices she makes.   Do we ever analyze a man’s choices to the nth degree?

    Surprised by it All

    Quite frankly,  I’ve been surprised by it all.  I live in an environment, thanks to many who came before me, where gender isn’t a prominent issue on my mind.  Roles where I grew up, where I call home now and where I work aren’t defined by gender for the most part.  I, and I would guess a lot of us male or female, need to be reminded more about some of the points that Jimmy Carter makes in the above article about how this is not the case in much of the world still today.

    But despite the lack of focus on gender roles in my world, when I examine myself I realize that I do seem to have more choices to make, even more than my better half, and I do seem to agonize over these choices both big and small much more than my equal and partner-in-crime husband does.  As a matter of fact, when I mentioned to him considering blogging about this topic to get his opinion, he had none.   It isn’t even on his radar.

    So my question is, is women wanting it all what leaves us waffling or second-guessing ourselves on so many choices?  What if we decided having it all isn’t really what we want? Would it leave us better able to be more confident in the decisions we do make and to take on a role of personal leadership for ourselves?

    I’ll be taking some time in this blog over the next few weeks to examine some ways that both women (and men) can consider tools for personal leadership in their own lives as a way to guide the roles and focus in which they assume.    I hope you’ll subscribe to the blog to be able to read these posts;

    Lesson In Personal Leadership 1:  What’s most important and the role of balance

    Lesson in Personal Leadership 2:  Sometimes throwing yourself out of whack is what’s most important

    Lesson in Personal Leadership 3:  Know your value

    Lesson in Personal Leadership 4:  Be confident in your decisions

    Lesson in Personal Leadership 5:  Help others and respect their decisions

    Quoted in a link to another article out of one mentioned above, Marina Whitman a professor at The University of Michigan said, “I think this thing about ‘can women have it all?’ or ‘can’t they have it all?’ is kind of a silly argument,” she said. “Yes, you may have it all, but not all at once.”

    Learning personal leadership lessons to guide yourself may be the best place to start in realizing what is most important and at what time.

  • Passions: A Real Life Example

    The last two weeks have been devoted to finding your passions through your Holland Code and through examining people, things and ideas that you are passionate about.

    To make the exercises more concrete, back to the example of Graham:

    His Holland Code

    ESA (Enterprising, Social, Artistic) is his Holland Code with a strong bent towards the E.   I like to call him the ultimate capitalist.

    Job titles connected to these areas:

    Enterprising

    Social

    Artistic

    His Top Passions

    Establishing and Maintaining Interpersonal Relationships

    Provide Consultation and Advice to Others

    Selling or Influencing Others

    Monitoring and Controlling Resources

    Getting Information

    Analyzing Data or Information

    Developing Objectives and Strategies

    Notice that most of his passions are tied to people (social) and ideas (enterprising, artistic).   You don’t see many related to things, which is tied to why his Holland Code does not show a bent towards realistic or conventional occupations.

    Any guesses now on what Graham does now that you have seen his talent and passion responses?

    Want to do these exercises yourself?

    Take My Next Move for your Holland Code for free

    Identify your Talents Passions and Values through Horizon Point’s free tool

  • 2 Questions for striving servant leaders

    2 Questions for striving servant leaders

    WHERE IS YOUR CAR AND YOUR NURSERY?

    Is your leadership philosophy one of servant leadership?  Wonderful!  I would challenge you this week to consider if you are behaving in ways that demonstrate servant leadership.  Here are some simple questions to ask yourself:

    Where is your car parked at the office?

    Do you have an assigned spot with your name or title on it right up front, or do people simply just know the front row is your parking spot whether a sign is there or not?   Or do you discretely park in the back row of the parking lot even though you are the first to arrive?

    If you have a nursery connected to your office, do your employees have that luxury too?

    Much has been said about Marissa Mayer’s decision to eliminate telecommuting for Yahoo employees, but what I find most intriguing as a leadership lesson in this scenario of a young, successful new mother and new CEO is that she apparently had a nursery attached to her office to balance work-life demands.  Do the rest of her employees have this privilege?  Nope.   I would imagine this fact seals the coffin in her employees’ morale that now have a harder time balancing work life demands because they can’t telecommute, much less have a nursery at the office.

    More on this issue here:

    Fast Company

    The Art of Managing: Work is Where the Brain Is

     

    The bottom line:  Practice what you preach.  If you want to demonstrate a mentality of putting others and customers first, then ask yourself, do your employees come first or do you?

     

    image source:  http://pride-and-love-by-tia.blogspot.com/2012/08/chapter-19_25.html

  • Passions through People, Things and Ideas & Other Cool Tools

    Identifying your Holland Code is a good starting place to consider your passions, but it isn’t the only way to discover what truly cranks your tractor.

    You can use the Find Your Point Worksheet to identify passions through the categories of people, things and ideas to determine career areas (the passion section starts on page 11).   Each item underlined in the worksheet is a link to jobs connected to that dimension.

    Cool tools for finding your passion

    Stanford Resources

    Bureau of Labor Tool

    Who Do you Want 2 B?

    Questions to ask yourself

    What do you spend your free time doing?

    What do you loose track of time doing?

    If you go to read something online, what is a site you visit most frequently? Or if you were to pick up a magazine or book, what do you read about? What is the subject that most interests you?