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Following Your Passion

When Doing What’s Right Makes Everything Go Wrong

By Laura Berman Fortgang on August 4, 2017

A whistleblower losing their job and being black balled in their field. A politically active executive seeing no choice other than to resign after being harassed for their beliefs. A kid in school getting in trouble for trying to help the victim of a bully.

One of the most confounding dynamics of being human is acting on good faith, pure intentions, and thinking you are doing the right thing only to ‘ruin’ your life in the aftermath.

Having had both a front line and bird’s eye view to some of these scenarios, I can tell you that they are excruciating. That is, until we can step out of ourselves and see that the abrupt turn is actually a new direction being put right in our path.

In the short term there is pain, regret, loss, anger, second guessing and running the scenario over and over in one’s mind until it becomes an unhealthy obsession.

Losing a job or the ability to work in your field or attend your school have real and upsetting consequences. Short term remedies might need to be found.

However, the only way out is through.

Getting through obstaclesI ask my clients to shift their perspective from seeing this turn of events as happening TO them to something that is happening FOR them.

To somehow, despite the pain and loss allow the turn to become an invitation to something good and dare I say, even better. (oooh that’s easy to say, but I know, harder to do)

When all you hit are roadblocks, you have to take a detour or find another way.

Take Stock
What are you left with? If a vase fell to the floor and broke into pieces, you still have something left—the water that spilled, the glass pieces, and the flowers that were in it. You can still make something new.

Allow Things To Change Form
This is where people get stuck. They can’t or won’t let their hard skills and soft skills change form and be put to use somewhere new. It’s hard to see another possibility.

It becomes an identity crisis. Who am I, if I don’t have what I just lost? This question has a positive answer. You have to set out to find it.

Determine the CORE
What matters now? What mattered to you about the ‘old’ thing you were doing or about the place that you were doing it in? What was central to your satisfaction or happiness with it? Where was the meaning for you?

Whatever your answer to these questions is, is the core of what’s left. THAT becomes the pursuit. Where and how can you exercise that CORE?

Whatever obstacles have been put in your way that keep you from doing what you want to do the way you want to do it are an invitation to change.

Change is a tall order, and it’s not easy. But if you want OUT of the pain caused by the block, you have to do a bypass.

Trust me – YOU WILL LAND—you will be found.

Let us know how we can help.

Filed Under: Following Your Passion, Inspiration to Follow Your Blueprint, Job Change, Lessons Learned, Life Lessons, Now What? Newsletter Articles, Reinventing Yourself, Taking Action Tagged With: Change, coaching, entrepreneurs, life coach, take action, transitionLeave a Comment

#QuotesToLiveBy: What Is Your Work?

By Laura Berman Fortgang on July 31, 2017

"Your work is to discover your world and then with all your heart give yourself to it." Buddha

Filed Under: Following Your Passion, Inspirational Quotes, Lessons Learned, Life Lessons, Motivational Quotes, Quotes to Live By, Taking Action Tagged With: Career Coaching, career transition, Change, Clarity, entrepreneurs, Following your passion, Laura Berman Fortgang, life coach, take actionLeave a Comment

I RAN, I LOST, I WON

By Laura Berman Fortgang on July 8, 2017

If you’ve been following along, I ran for NJ State Assembly, announcing in March and losing my primary on June 6th. What am I taking away from this experience?

NO PAIN, NO GAIN

I ran, I lost, I wonRunning for office, especially as a neophyte, was a huge learning curve. I thought of it in January and by mid-February, life handed me a campaign manager and a handful of consultants who helped me weigh the decision.

I jumped in with both feet and ran “off the line” for a chance to represent on the Democratic side.

I knew I was attempting something very difficult to achieve. You want the party endorsement (thus being “ON the line”) because most people blindly vote for whomever was chosen for them by their party. However, my fire was lit, and it was not going to wait two years to attempt to make a difference.

LISTENING is TEN TIMES More VALUABLE than Talking!

Being a professional speaker and performer, I was not intimidated by the public aspect of running for office, but my greatest asset, I found, was my ability to listen.

As I participated on panels and a candidate forum, I repeatedly heard my fellow candidates speak ad nauseum on tangents and not address the question asked.

These were not experienced “pivoters,” but people who like to hear themselves talk. At one point, I was the last of four to address a particular question, and I asked the person who asked it if he thought his question had been answered. He said no.

I proceeded to answer, but prefaced it with “Please don’t confuse my economy of words with not having anything to say. I believe in addressing this head on. The answer is no.”

Done.

LOSING SUCKS

I waited for the election results at a friend’s house, along with the couple who hosted and my husband. We could see the outcome starting to gel, and then the final call from an official source came in. I had lost. I was OK. Until I wasn’t.

The news was crushing, and I felt embarrassed that I had thought we could pull off the near impossible. The first day post election was ugly. I was so grateful that people were clearly giving me space and not rushing to call me. My disappointment quickly moved to anger.

I was livid that it seems that most people do not spend ANY time paying attention to who they are voting for and that many don’t show up to vote at all. I got half as many votes as the two winners (three of us were running for two seats), and I earned every single one of them.

It only made me more angry that apparently thousands of people (25% of eligible voters who voted) did not even pop open their computer for thirty seconds of research. If they had, they’d have seen that neither of my competitors had a website nor much online presence at all.

Perhaps they may have voted differently when they could only find one of us and gain an understanding of what that one stood for.

So there I was having felt compelled to run because the party didn’t care about my district or who actually won it —and the candidates who raised virtually no money and were not running a proper campaign took the win to compete in the general election in November.

Day Two, I was relieved. Day Three, I was completely cynical about our system, and the ability of good people ever being able to make a difference. Day Four, I was relieved that I didn’t have to keep campaigning. Day Five, I was fine – the grieving cycle had ended.

THE OUTCOME

I have no regrets. And, in fact, I am SO happy that I ran!

I have made more progress in getting involved in my town and state and therefore, the nation, than I ever would have just despairing about the news on TV. I had a ringside seat to the inner workings. I’m not an expert, but I now see how HUGE I had made the barrier between politics and me.

I, like many people, was just ignorant and diving in showed me it’s really easy to understand. I used to avoid it at any cost. Part apathy, part not knowing where or how to start understanding it.

With that said, politics is not the point. Knowing how government works at the municipal, county, state and national level is so that I can continue to be an agent of positive change. I hope I have shown others what’s possible.

These last few months took me away from home a great deal of the time.  It turned out that my family may not have acted like they missed me much, but now that I do not have to campaign any longer, I can see some very important things that need my care at home.

Turns out we only have so much energy and attention at any given time. This is something that keeps women, especially, from running for office. It won’t deter me from running again, but I’ll be better prepared next time.

Thank for taking the ride with me, and stay tuned for what’s next. Even if our politics are not the same, please know I don’t want to be a politician. I do want to be someone who listens, finds the patterns in the chaos, and works to be a part of the solution.

As a woman who stopped me in the grocery store said to me last week:
“I told my friends you weren’t a Democrat or a Republican. I told them you were someone who can get things done.”

I’ll take that and run. The support of so many has made this journey possible. As much as I wasn’t doing this for myself, I could not have done it by myself. Thanks for following along.

P.S. Politicians could really use coaching. Just saying.

Filed Under: Following Your Passion, Inspiration to Follow Your Blueprint, Lessons Learned, Life Lessons, Taking Action Tagged With: beat the odds, Change, Desire, Following your passion, Laura Berman Fortgang, new venture, Opportunity, take action, transition18 Comments

Tired of a Job You Hate?

By Laura Berman Fortgang on June 30, 2017

How would it be to take something you would do for free (and often do) simply because you love it that much and turn it into wild success? Impossible you say? Not so! Here are 11 people who have done just that.

red-sparks_MJCI-YHOMight they spark some inspiration in you?

11 Inspiring People Who Followed Their Passions and Found Amazing Success

Filed Under: Following Your Passion, Inspiration to Follow Your Blueprint, Job Satisfaction, Overnight Success Stories, Taking Action Leave a Comment

Proof that Passion and Career Can be One and the Same

By Laura Berman Fortgang on June 16, 2017

Sometimes it’s hard to believe, but it IS possible to turn your passion into a career. Here’s some evidence in the form of six very successful people who did just that!

Proof that Passion and Career Can be One and the SameWhat can you learn from them and how might you start moving your passion toward a career today?

6 Super Successful People on How They Turned Their Passion Into a Real Career

Filed Under: Following Your Passion, Inspiration to Follow Your Blueprint, Job Change, Job Satisfaction, Overnight Success Stories, Reinventing Yourself, Taking Action Tagged With: Career Change, career reinvention, career transition, Career transitions, entrepreneurs, Following your passion, new career, new direction, new venture, take actionLeave a Comment

The Life of a Double Agent: Managing a Major Change While Working

By Laura Berman Fortgang on May 9, 2017

If you read my last installment, you are aware that I’m running for office in NJ at the state level. It’s a full-time addition to an already full-time business and a full-time position as chief operating officer of a household with teenagers. This is not unlike what many of you are facing as you search for a new job or build bridges to your next career move.

overwhelming the amount of tasks have you feelingHow do you keep all the balls in the air? Let me give you the best of what I’ve got on that topic. I’m doing it, and this is how I help other people do it.

PREPARE: Realize that what you are about to embark on will require taking back hours of your day. Clear the way to make that happen. Get out of unnecessary commitments and begin lining up people who can help you.

LIGHTEN YOUR LOAD: Please don’t tell me you can’t. You either have to ask for help or hire it. Rely on friends to drive your kids or take over volunteer responsibilities.

Let your household responsibilities wait, or if you can afford to, hire out the pieces you will no longer have time for. My husband has taken over shopping and preparing meals, which had been my exclusive responsibility.

USE YOUR TIME WISELY: Make your new effort a top priority daily. What MUST get done today to move it forward? You can and should do more than the one thing, but you must have one FAIL PROOF item that WILL happen every day for your new direction or query.

BE CHOOSY: Along the lines of valuing your time, be sure that you are focusing on priorities in the rest of your life too. However, be very choosy. It’s OK to say no to things that will derail or distract your efforts right now. You have to be a bit selfish for a while.

“No” to everyone who wants to meet for coffee, “no” to meetings with no agenda, “no” to even your workout some days. (OK I’m talking about myself on that last one)

KEEP A MASTER LIST: Keep a longer-term list of things that have to be done in separate parts of your life. (Current job, future project, home life) and constantly re-prioritize. Delegate to get the most important things taken care of first while keeping your eye on the next thing coming up.

\(I’ve often said my years as a waitress made me very good at this—but I know that may not be that helpful for you!)

RUN TO WIN! —Yes, that’s political campaign lexicon, but when you are working towards a new job or a career change, you don’t do it to lose. You do it to win. Assume the win and behave accordingly!

IF you hold on to the vision of what you are trying to bring into your life by changing jobs or careers, I would expect you to be inspired.

That inspiration needs to fuel you as you keep up your life as a double agent. Fully living the life you’re in and the one you are growing towards.

You can do this! Let us know if we can help.

Filed Under: Following Your Passion, Inspiration to Follow Your Blueprint, Job Change, Job Satisfaction, Lessons Learned, Taking Action Tagged With: career path, career transition, entrepreneurs, Following your passion, Laura Berman Fortgang, new venture, Opportunity, take action1 Comment

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