I bet you know the person we’re about to describe.
He/she is dissatisfied with the way things are in the office and feels compelled to let you know - repeatedly.
Day-after-day, week-after-week, month-after-month, they’re:
and remarkably, not compelled to do anything about it.
We’ve always been baffled by co-workers like this. It’s as if they’ve turned over their career to everyone around them and are later miffed that things aren’t going their way.
While this is an extreme (but very real) example, we’ve found variations of these same symptoms in many ambitious and otherwise successful people. In fact, we have had seasons in our own careers where we began to spin in the self-pity cycle.
So why is it that people fall into the “good things happen to those who wait” mentality?
There are a lot of reasons.
It’s sad because it’s a recipe for career disaster that should be avoided at all costs.
Good things come to those who initiate
You’ve already initiated many aspects of your professional journey. You went to school, picked up a degree or two, perhaps some professional designations. You applied for jobs and were hired. You get the picture.
You made it this far, so why not go further?
What is it that you’re looking to accomplish? Are you hoping to build a new skillset? Get experience in working with a new type of software? Try your hand at leadership? Find a new job?
When you initiate you make conscious choices to move in the direction of your aspirations
It’s the difference between being the driver or the passenger.
The passenger can sit back and relax, take in the scenery or take a nap - but they have no control over how long it will take to arrive at the destination - or if they arrive at all.
The driver, on the other hand, can choose the scenic route or the freeway, elect to stop at every roadside attraction or drive straight through. She may be tired when she arrives but she will have driven the course of her choosing to the destination of her choice.
So, you can hope someone will hand you an opportunity, or you can take steps to make that thing you’re looking to accomplish actually happen. And there are lots of ways to do that.
One of our most trusted mentors told us long ago that choice not chance determines your destiny. “What are you waiting for?” she said to us, “Get busy doing it!”
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