Monday, May 25, 2020
Is Fear a Part of Your Professional Life - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career
Is Fear a Part of Your Professional Life - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career During my work with job seekers or those contemplating a job/career change, I evaluate the amount of fear that drivesâ"or paralyzesâ"my clients. To some extent, all of them exhibit fear originated by some threatâ"or so they perceive. For a person out of a job, that feeling is not only a perception but also, unfortunately, a reality. The normal human body has a built-in mechanism to protect itself from such an emotion by either confronting it or running away from it. Itâs also known as the fight-or-flight response. In more-extreme situations, such fear leads to anxiety, but Iâll let a mental-health professional explain that one. Paralyzed or energized? Conversely, a few clients indeed become energized by fear resulting from lack of employment. Their adrenaline levels rise sharply, and theyâre ready to attack. They see opportunities coming out of this employment change, and nothing stops them from getting to their next assignment. They exhibit a go-getter mentality and thrive on even small incremental successes. However, the majority of those I see react to their unknown futures by clamming up and thus thinking theyâre protecting themselves during this vulnerable stage of their life. I vividly remember my own situation during a transition. My entire attitude could have been described as, âThe answer is no, so whatâs your question?â Itâs a shame that our emotions and our logic are not always congruent. In working with people who at times seem paralyzed due to their new, jobless reality, I try to clearly understand whatâs behind the obvious fact that they donât have jobs. That understanding is typically complex and intertwined with other, tangled elements. For example, embarrassment vis-Ã -vis family and friends, or self-humiliation as a parent unable to financially support a child who wants and deserves a college education, or, perhaps, aggravation of an already bad spousal relationship due to the inability to contribute to basic family finances for an extended period. And the list can go on and on. Attention to the positive In such a situation, my solution is to attempt to provide clients with (1) job search tools, (2) exposure to and familiarity with the job search process, (3) ample amounts of mock interviewing that increase clientsâ knowledge and experience, and above all, (4) listening as they talk about their pain, and (5) an understanding of all theyâre going through. Another tactic thatâs proved successful is helping clients learn to divert their attention to something positive. For example, clients can learn to network effectively in order to establish new relationships with people who may be able to help them and whom in turn they can help. Clients can also learn to discuss volunteering opportunities that not only could lead to a job but in the interim could help job seekers mingle with other people. And, more often than not, volunteers could hear again the words âThanks for a job well doneââ"a sentiment that for a while has probably been absent from their lives.
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