Vocation Hopping - What You Want to Recognise
Don’t always listen to the weird things that people talk about when you mention the fact that you want to change your job. You should choose your counsel wisely as most people haven’t thought through their vocations and are often on the standard road. They will try to deter you from changing your career as it validates their decision to stick with theirs.
I’ve created a set of advice posts on these blogs to explain what is really going on with the whole issue of vocational alterations. Hopefully by using this post and other articles that I have written for you, you will find yourself better prepared and able to tackle your next interview more strategically.Firstly, we are going to dispel a few myths about careers.
- Career Myth: You can’t make a living doing something you really, truly loveThis is the grand-daddy of career myths, the belief that you can’t have a “practical” career doing something that you were passionate about. It has to be one or the other.
This myth is rooted in fear. Fear that we have to sacrifice our happiness to make a living. Don’t buy the myth that you can’t earn a living by doing what you love.
If you find yourself buying into this myth, consider this question - As you look back on your life, what will you regret more? Following your passion or following your fears?
- Career Myth: Expect a career epiphany
When you see a link to “Find Your Dream Job,” do you immediately click on it to see what’s there? Do you look at every “Top Ten Career” list out there to see if anything catches your interest? Do you know your MBTI type? If you do, you might be falling prey to the career epiphany myth.
I’d love, love, love it if most of my clients had a career epiphany that indicated to them, in crystal-clear terms, their next step. Instead, I see career “unfoldings” or a journey of discovery much more regularly. That is, being willing to not ignore the obvious, the pokes, the prods, and listen carefully to the whisper within. Yep, forget harp music and angels, for most of us, the career epiphany is a quiet whisper.
You can get even more sensible career help for your medical interview by hunting on the net for good interview training websites. Then make use of your good sense











