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Stop Playing Safe. Margie WarrellЧитать онлайн книгу.

Stop Playing Safe - Margie Warrell


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neuron junctions which, in layman language, means that our possible mental states exceed the total number of atoms in the universe. That's a lot of potential left under the bed.

      Unleashing it requires focusing your inner ‘laser beam’ with a reason to set your alarm before sunrise (except if you live in Alaska), roll up your sleeves, and take a brave leap of faith in the moments it matters most. There will be many. Only then will you be able to resist succumbing to pride's ever-tempting pull that confines so many to lives of immaculate mediocrity. Only then will you build your ‘courage muscles’ for the bigger, albeit sometimes messy, life you have it within you to live.

      The multiple crises of the COVID-19 pandemic jolted most of us out of our comfort zone, shaking up our lives in ways we could never have predicted, much less planned for. Yet when the world you know falls apart and you're compelled to piece it back together in a whole new way, it can pull back the curtain on what truly matters to you.

       If you are not feeling ‘on fire’ in your life (or are bona fide languishing), then step back from your busy doing to re-evaluate who you are being in the storybook of your own life. As you do, ask yourself: is this a story you'd want to read one day? Is how you're showing up for life aligned with how you want to measure your life?

      We had images of us enjoying the high life as a young married couple in New York, London, Paris, or maybe somewhere more exotic … Shanghai, Hong Kong, Rome … Berlin, maybe?

      A few months later Andrew arrived home one evening excited but also a little nervous. He thought he'd landed us an opportunity … ‘But it's not where we were thinking,’ he said with some apprehension.

      My mind started racing. Rio? Mexico City? Delhi? Kuala Lumpur?

      Nope. Port Moresby.

      Papua New Guinea. Mecca for cultural anthropologists since some of PNG's 600 indigenous tribes (speaking 850 languages!) had only just encountered modern civilisation.

      Truth was, Port Moresby, the not-very-sophisticated capital of PNG, wasn't on my top 500 list. But we were ready for adventure and, not wanting to spend our lives in the one city (or country), we signed up.

      While many people thought we were crazy — at the time it was one of the most dangerous countries in the world outside a war zone — we saw it as an adventure.

      So off we went and I traded my ‘upwardly mobile’ career at a top consulting firm to work for a small PNG-based marketing company. It was an interesting role and I found myself doing everything from directing television commercials to running market research for global brands selling everything from beer to instant noodles.

      Yet while ‘helping people be braver’ was very rewarding, I had a limited ‘toolbox’ beyond my own hard-won wisdom, so I returned to study, enrolling in distance postgrad studies in Psychology. At the time, I'd never heard of coaching. I didn't even know there were people who spoke on stages and were paid for it. I just knew that helping people uncover their fears and take more courageous action was something that lit me up and came naturally.

      By the time I left PNG, seven months pregnant with our first child, Lachlan, I was on my way to living a far more purpose-centred life than I had been when I landed there nearly three years earlier. Sure, adventure travel was still important, but pursuing work that drew on my talents and served others in a meaningful way had become even more so.

      Did finding a deeper sense of purpose in my life permanently eradicate all my fears? Hardly! Time and time again my fears — of not having what it takes, of failing, or looking foolish, of being rejected or exposed as inadequate or having people think I'm ‘up myself’ or ‘too ambitious’ — have risen up and tempted me to play small and safe. But my passion for my work has helped me rise above those fears — to be brave in those moments when I felt anything but. Helping others be braver, to live their own purpose and fulfil their unique potential, became the new metric for which I wanted to measure my life.

      Since leaving Papua New Guinea in the late 1990s, my professional path has been anything but linear. I've had to restart my career/calling/business (they're all wrapped up together) on multiple continents as we moved around the world with Andrew's career — from Moresby back to Melbourne, over to Adelaide, off to Dallas, Texas, weeks after 9/11, then up to Washington, DC, back Down Under, up to Singapore, now back to the USA, though this time on our terms.

      Sometimes it's been tough going. Yet whenever I've considered just throwing it all in and ‘getting a job’, I've always circled back to the same place … that is (and indulge me in the double negative) — I cannot not do what I do. Such is the pull of my calling.

       Passion — What makes you come alive?

       Strengths — What are your innate talents and gifts?

       Expertise — Where do you make the biggest impact?

       Values — How will you measure success?

      WHAT GIVES YOU ENERGY AND MAKES YOU COME ALIVE?

      My two youngest sons, Matthew and Ben, were fortunate enough to be taught by Emmy Bocek when they were in kindergarten. While Emmy had been teaching rambunctious kindergarteners for 30-odd years by the time I met her, she had no shortage of energy or passion for a classroom of noisy little humans. Emmy told me once that she believed she had the ‘best job in the world’. This was self-evident from both her enthusiasm and patience. I was always grateful for her passion (almost as much as I was that I didn't have to manage a classroom of kids every day — my own four were plenty!).

      Over the years I've met many people from all walks of life who feel passionate about their work. From sheep farmers and chefs to scientists and beauticians — while how they spend their days spans the spectrum, they all had a passion for what they did that brought meaning to their days and, as research shows,


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