I recently spent time talking to students at a local college. I was interested to listen to their goals and objectives but was left a little flat after hearing their lack of vision or enthusiasm. Maybe I expected more because I was brought up in a generation of entrepreneurs and yuppies.
I asked one of the students what he was studying and he replied a course in computer studies. I felt encouraged that he was trying to better his life and tried to prompt further positive dialog. I questioned him on where he hope his studying would take him, what career did he hope to follow. His response left me deflated, he said “ just a job”.
I desperately wanted to help this vulnerable child to get some perspective and direction so it tried a visualisation technique with him. I suggested that he imagined what type of company he would like to work for, where they are based, what type of industry they cater for, how many people worked there, and what job he wanted to have. The next practical stage was to find the person already doing that job and asked them how they got there.
I’ve done a lot of walking and climbed many mountains. When you stand at the bottom and look at the top, it may seem almost impossible to know how to get to the pinnacle. When you are standing on the top looking down you can see every path to the summit.
By getting the student to talk to someone already doing the job they aspire to have, the experienced employee has already written the map. It creates a shortcut to success.
http://www.changingoutcomes.co.uk/
http://www.mikebowden.uk
I’ve noticed so many times through my life that people tend to get what they focus on, whether that is good or bad. We often anticipate a problem so guess what that’s what happens, it seems like we are a magnet for everything that we are trying to avoid. Not only do we attract negativity due to our focus, but it also distorts any solutions to correct the situation. Many times the result can be worse than problem that we started with.
Many years ago I worked for a furniture company. A family run transport contractor was assigned to deliver our goods to customer’s homes. The owner of that company was proud to let his son deliver the goods in his brand new removal lorry. The lad was only just turned twenty years old and went out on his own for the first time.
He was driving along the road and failed to steer around a tight bend. The lorry came off the road and headed in a straight line across a ploughed field and crashed into the only tree in the field. He was focusing so much on the crash that he forgot to apply the brakes or turn the steering wheel.
It is easy to focus on the negative things in life, all the obstacles and barriers we face. We can visualise things going wrong and make a catastrophe of the outcome before we begin, but that only gives us what we see as the result. Paint your picture of what you want rather than tainting the image with negativity. You have to believe in a positive outcome if that is what you really want.
Many years ago I worked for a furniture company. A family run transport contractor was assigned to deliver our goods to customer’s homes. The owner of that company was proud to let his son deliver the goods in his brand new removal lorry. The lad was only just turned twenty years old and went out on his own for the first time.
He was driving along the road and failed to steer around a tight bend. The lorry came off the road and headed in a straight line across a ploughed field and crashed into the only tree in the field. He was focusing so much on the crash that he forgot to apply the brakes or turn the steering wheel.
It is easy to focus on the negative things in life, all the obstacles and barriers we face. We can visualise things going wrong and make a catastrophe of the outcome before we begin, but that only gives us what we see as the result. Paint your picture of what you want rather than tainting the image with negativity. You have to believe in a positive outcome if that is what you really want.