Jul 13, 2011

Holy Crickey...it's July 13th!!!!

 So here it is...on the precipice of a life altering decision and I can honestly say I'm terrified. Like "fun house" terrified where you WANT that next corner, the crazy man with the chainsaw and the ghoulish head popping out of a box...why...because deep down inside you know it's safe. The world will not end, the ride will not kill you...the fun is in the moment...and moment...here I come!!!

 As I was digging out my old emails and deleting any incriminating evidence : ) what? I found this post...and this is where I was years ago...this is where I am now...only now I'm taking the steps forward and recognizing that I need this, way down deep in my heart and soul I need this. not to escape the great relationships I have made here at the college, they will live on and the people surrounding me helped shape me...I can never forget that.

 So without further delay....

Are you Trapped Inside Your Comfort Zone?
Do you wish for success, only to watch others get the promotion, the dream job, the new career you wish you had? Do other people seem to get all the breaks while you stay stuck in the same place?
Professional career trainer Joe Gilliam believes that success eludes many professionals because they've gotten too cozy in their comfort zones. A motivational speaker and author of the audiotape series, The Winner In You, Gilliam explains how our comfort zones can keep us from making important life changes that could lead us to success.
"Where you are now is your comfort zone," he says. "Oh sure, you may say you don't like it, you may wish for more - you may be tired of what you're doing, but you stay because it's comfortable where you are. All around your comfort zone is a barrier, " Gilliam continues. "Change is what you do when you step beyond the barrier of your comfort zone."
6 barriers that trap you in your comfort zone

Here are six specific barriers that work to keep you in the perceived safety of your comfort zones and a solution for breaking beyond each barrier:

BARRIER 1: The best I could do.
EXAMPLE: You tell yourself, "I never wanted to be in sales. I wanted to be a pilot, but this was the best I could do."
SOLUTION: Just because that was the best you could do at that given point in your life doesn't mean that's where you have to stay now. "You have the power to make changes that can alter your future," Gilliam notes. "Start making lists of things you want to do and be in your future - and dream big!"

BARRIER 2: The "talks a lot" barrier.
EXAMPLE: Millions of wannabe writers talk endlessly about the great book they're going to write. The problem is they do more talking than writing! Soon they've talked their book away and no longer have the desire to put it on paper.
SOLUTION: Make a commitment to talk about your dream no more than one hour a week, and only then to people who can actually help you achieve it. However, you can talk about what you've actually done toward your dream all you want.

BARRIER 3: Psychology of entitlement.
EXAMPLE: You believe, "I deserve it. They owe it to me. I'm entitled to it." Because you feel so entitled, it's likely that you're not putting in the work necessary to achieve whatever it is you want.
SOLUTION: Be aware that your feeling of entitlement will cripple your chances for success. "You have to have internal drive to reach your goal," Gilliam declares. "You can't wait for someone to hand it to you."

BARRIER 4: Afraid to fail.
EXAMPLE: You've hated your management job for years and long to own your own business, but you've never tried because you're afraid you won't be successful.
SOLUTION: First, realize that this is the No. 1 barrier that keeps people stuck inside their comfort zones. But studies of highly successful people show that they actually experience far more failures than those less successful! "The difference is, they refuse to be defeated by setbacks, disappointments or failures. They never stop pursuing their dreams," Gilliam notes. "Unsuccessful people give up early and settle for less."

BARRIER 5: "Can't decide" barrier.
EXAMPLE: You work at a job below your potential because you just can't decide what great career to go after - and you don't want to pick the wrong one and miss a fantastic opportunity.
SOLUTION: Understand that indecision is keeping you from taking action. Missed opportunities only limit you if you dwell upon those in the past instead of looking for the ones ahead. "Opportunities are not being rationed," Gilliam says.

BARRIER 6: Procrastination (a.k.a. Living in Somedayland)
EXAMPLE: You swear you're going to make a major career change someday, but first you've got to get all your credit cards paid off. Or lose 30 pounds. Or get your kids through school. There's always a "but first" or "if" or "Someday, I'll .." in your statements about your goals.
SOLUTION: Stop putting off your dreams. Focus on what's really important to you -- and make that your first priority. "Don't end up as a person with a 'but first …' complex," Gilliam advises. "Many people live a steady diet of 'if' and 'but's. If 'if' and 'but's were candy and nuts, some people would have Christmas every day!"

How to move beyond your barriers

How do you get past these powerful barriers and venture out of your comfort zone? Gilliam prescribes a four-step process:

1. Identify the barrier or barriers that are holding you back, then ask yourself what that barrier is protecting you from.
2. On a sheet of paper, write down the hardest thing you'll have to overcome to move past your barrier.
3. Now write the worst that could happen if you leave your comfort zone and fail at whatever it is you want to achieve.
4. Finally, describe in detail the best thing that could happen if you leave your comfort zone and succeed in realizing your dream.

"Which side of that barrier do you really want to be on?" Gilliam asks. "This is the time to be brutally honest with yourself. Take a look at where you are and what's keeping you from going after your dreams."
"If you don't stretch beyond your comfort zone, you're going to be in the same place tomorrow and the next day and the next. It's not easy to come out of your comfort zone -- but your comfort has a price," he concludes.


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 And so my box is open, my zone is about to be expanded, my understanding of things is better (or maybe worse) than it was when I copied this info in...2003...holy shnaggits...2003. Tell me I take awhile to make a decision?? Ask my friend "the Killer" how i was buying a TV!!! ;) 


 I hit the road on Friday...and I CAN"T WAIT!!!


 Thanks for everything to my peeps at BVC! Stay in touch when you can and I will do the same! Good friends take time and effort and I can't wait to move forward into the next level of friendship (not work related) with those that I clicked with. 


 Vroom Vroom!!!

5 comments:

  1. Your article is encouraging people to be ambitious, not to focus only on one good thing. There is also problems to change the "confort zone" when you are chief of family; you have to integrate the needs of your family before decided.
    Good Luck Buddy.
    Maurice

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  2. Thanks Maurice! I am lucky and unlucky in that I do not have much more than me to consider at this time in ny life. You are a man of riches though and while you balance your future against your families needs, you also have a long and fruit giving future in a way a career or adventure could never duplicate. I am filled with admiration for you and all other New Canadians who under go the struggle and joy of becoming future Canada.
    Thanks for your well wishes and the post! I look forward to more!
    B

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  3. Hey it's Satay! Even from a distance you're providing me sound 'Hippy' advice, I love it! I now have another interview for a different position at AHS, getting out of that comfort zone will be easy if someone else wants to hire me :) Miss ya, have fun and be safe!

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  4. Sh1ne on, you crazey d1amond!

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  5. I tell everyone how you purchase a TV.... painfully! At least it was for me.....
    Miss you! "The Killer"

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Thank you!