All I'm gonna say right now is...

Moderator: Fist and Faith
aliantha wrote:I don't mean to say that what follows is true for you as it is for me, but I thought it was worth sharing a thought that this post provoked. I find that my job is fulfilling when I'm doing it, but when I look back on it in retrospect and evaluate what I've done, it is unsatisfying. Only in the present do I find that I'm doing something worthwhile. There's too much second-guessing when I'm out of that present to allow for confidence and pride in my work when I'm at home.StevieG wrote:The biggest reason I'm still at my current job (12 years now!), as personally unfulfilling as it is, is that I'm afraid to leave and find myself in another bitch-on-wheels situation. So yeah, I'd rather put up with it for another 8 years (and write stories, hoping I can make enough money to retire sooner) than start looking for another job.
Actually, it's really not that bad...I do intake on a hotline, so I get to talk to a lot of people about their situations and even though it oftentimes runs into pretty similar stories, there's enough variety in personalities to keep me interested in each call.aliantha wrote:That sucks, Holsety.No, my job isn't even particularly fulfilling when I'm doing it. I do zero writing and very little editing, and my work involves almost no intellectual stimulation. Plus I spend a lot of time running interference with the Finance Department, whose language I neither speak nor have much interest in learning, and gods know they don't speak mine.
And I typed 30,000 keystrokes yesterday. Probably average about 20k usually, up to 35K on busy days. Yep...my job involves plenty of writing. (And plenty of intellectual stimulation, for which I am extremely grateful.)aliantha wrote:I do zero writing and very little editing, and my work involves almost no intellectual stimulation.
Glad to hear it Linna! It is a phrase that can help me a lot at times. I had a minor set back today in a social situation. I'd been up late and was lacking a little sleep, and went to a child's birthday party. I didn't really want to be there, and wasn't that keen on making conversation. But as I continued, I found that I started becoming scared of making conversation - same old story, just like the bad old days. I found myself chanting the mantra of wtf, and it did help a little. It can be a battle at times, but these tests need to be conquered! It is all too easy to slip into old habits, and start doubting yourself.Linna Heartlistener wrote:Stevie G.- guess what? I'm thinking the "sometimes you just gotta say wtf?" is an example of "taking an action before you lose your nerve."
And that's lookin' to be darned useful to me!
Thanks.
Indeed! Fear of failure has been mentioned before, and remains a large reason for fear. It is a driving force and a strangler also. I wish you all the best in the degree, and hope that the driving force is the winner!jemCheeta wrote:I am doing well in school and that is because I am terrified of failure now in a way I wasn't before. It is my motivating factor, but I can tell it's sort of damaging. Oh well, after I get the degree I can get the therapy to fix it?![]()
Thanks for thinking about & trying to be sensitive to my sense of restraint w/ words (or whatever it is?), ali.aliantha wrote:Thanks, StevieG -- and I forgot to thank you before, Linna.
Linna, when I'm in a situation in which I'm dithering over doing something -- not necessarily fear-based dithering, but I think it could work for that, as well -- I'll finally get fed up with myself and say, "This is ridiculous," and just do it. It's the next cousin, I think, to "WTF", and it might be easier for you to say to yourself if you don't want to say the f-word (even in your head).
Or maybe I don't know!Avatar wrote:Failure isn't the end of the world you know.