Making a Mid-Life career Change: 10 Tips For Smart Decisions

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Career change often begins when your world seems to be spinning out of control. During hard times and layoffs, you have to think about your next move. For many mid-life, mid-career professionals, it's an opportunity to start fresh. When your current career no longer works, you have to find new opportunities -- whether you feel ready or not.

During these difficult times, you might realize you need to make tough decisions. Your career affects everything: where you live, how you relate to your family and how healthy you are. Clients tell me they never feel they have enough information. A crystal ball wouldn't hurt either. Here are ten ways you can make solid, strong decisions when your world seems to be spinning around you.

1. Make career decisions based on who you are now -- not the person you were ten years ago (or even ten days ago). For example, maybe you spent a life as the quintessential urban resident and now you realize you really want to plant a garden. You enjoyed twenty years of law or medicine or sales, and now you find yourself writing poetry and making time to help a third-grader learn to read. Your old career will not fit anymore.

2. Be willing to walk away if you're not ready to sign on the dotted line. You always have choices. If you're supposed to have that house or that job, it will almost always be there tomorrow.

3.Share your plans with friends, family and colleagues. Notice how you feel when you share. Are you proud and excited?

4. If you keep going back and forth, you probably need more information. Talk to people who have first-hand experience. Book and Internet knowledge will be outdated by the time you read it.

5. Create a worst-case scenario for the option that is most tempting. Now compare to the worst-case scenario for what you feel you really should do.

6. Recognize your financial comfort zone. Some people sleep soundly when they don't know where they will get the next mortgage payment. Others toss and turn when their checking account falls below ten thousand dollars.

7. Resist pressure to make speedy decisions. During a time of transition, fast decisions can actually slow you down.

8. Keep tuned to your own intuition. Insist on quiet time before making big decisions. Meditate, write in a journal, and/or enjoy your own company in the outdoors. If you feel uncertain or intimidated, go away until you feel stronger.

9. Take small steps if at all possible. I use the metaphor of dipping a toe into the water. Warm? Start wading. Do you find yourself waving good-by to the people left behind? Are your toes curling happily into the wet sand? Or are you finding sharp rocks, icy water and harsh tides? Do you feel ready to take off and swim to the other side of the world? You can still turn back, but do you want to?

10. Give yourself time. Nearly every client who has made a major life change has called me to say, "Ouch. I think I made a really bad mistake." Six months or a year later, they are thrilled with their new careers -- or they realize what they need to do instead.





Article Source: Gate Articles

About the Author

nd now I invite you to find out more by visiting Your 21-Day Extreme Career Makeover . Discover how career change really works so you can start moving to the career you've always wanted. From Cathy Goodwin, Ph.D.

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