ArticlesReader.com Menu
Newest Articles
Most Viewed Articles
ArticlesReader.com RSS
Submit Article
Login
Signup
Search the articles

Articles Main Categories
Advice
Animals
Automobiles
Business
Career
Communications
Computer Programming
Computers
Entertainment
Environment
Family
Fashion
Finance
Food
Health & Medical
Home & Garden
Humor
Internet Business
Internet Marketing
Legal
Leisure & Recreation
Marketing
Other
Politics
Reference & Education
Religion
Self Improvement
Sports
Technology & Science
Travel
Writing
Subscribe
Receive alert message from us when new articles submitted to our site for free.

Enter your name

Enter your email

Syndicate

















Related Products
Home::Career

Travel Light to Work

Author : Nan S. Russell

As a frequent traveler, my goal for each trip is to travel light. Despite thoughtful planning, sometimes that goal is shattered when I go to close the suitcase and realize I need a larger, or even second one. I can't always get my packing right and end up taking more than I need. When that happens it's frustrating. I hate lugging extra baggage and feeling encumbered.

Work is like that, too. We often bring too much baggage. It may not look like baggage, but it weighs us down just the same. It's disguised as past relationships with bosses; previous work experiences; mind-talk about whether we can or can't do something; how we've been treated in work (and life), or how we think we have. And usually there's at least one duffle bag stuffed with our expectations.

I've found in twenty years of management most people bring suitcases full of self-doubt, old patterning from old relationships and self-fulfilling prophesies to work every day, and it stifles them. Most people let past work experiences dictate their future ones. So if they've worked in three different jobs or companies, those three job experiences are packed into the suitcases they're lugging. Some people end up lugging dozens and dozens of them.

They're like the travelers in this story I heard. One day a young man stopped his car at the side of the road as he entered the township limits. An older woman paused from her gardening as he approached. "I'm thinking of moving to this town," he told her, "and I was wondered if you could tell me what the people are like here?" "Well," she said, "what were the people like where you lived before?" "Demanding and competitive and not very helpful," he said. "Well," she told him, "I think you'll find people the same way here."

A little while later another man stopped and approached the woman. Again she was asked what the townspeople were like and again she asked the traveler what his experience had been where he lived before. "Oh, the people were great. Everyone was helpful and supportive – a real community." "You'll find people the same way here," she said.

People who are winning at working are like that second traveler. They know in work (and life) you tend to get what you expect. And if they're encumbered with emotional baggage and poor expectations, they get poor results. Instead, they follow advice like Deepak Chopra's, "Always expect the best and you'll see that the outcome is spontaneously contained in the expectation."

People who are winning at working are one suitcase people. Like a seasoned world traveler, they've learned what essentials to pack. They bring to work only those skills and experiences that will positively impact their work and future. They leave the rest of their baggage behind. Want to be winning at working? Travel light.

(c) 2005 Nan S. Russell. All rights reserved.

Sign up to receive Nan's free biweekly eColumn at http://www.winningatworking.com. Nan Russell has spent over twenty years in management, most recently with QVC as a Vice President. She has held leadership positions in Human Resource Development, Communication, Marketing and line Management. Nan has a B.A. from Stanford University and M.A. from the University of Michigan. Currently working on her first book, Winning at Working: 10 Lessons Shared, Nan is a writer, columnist, small business owner, and on-line instructor. Visit http://www.nanrussell.com or contact Nan at info@nanrussell.com.

Spam emails More free articles

Related articles


  1. Tips For Successful Job Hunting: How To Get A Job Without A Resume
  2. How to Turn a Job Search into a Career Find
  3. How to Pick the Best Career For You , Part 2: From Exposure-to-Opportunity
  4. My Landscaping Business is Better Than Your Lanscaping Business...
  5. Why Culinary Education
  6. How To Pick The Best Career For You, Part 1
  7. 4 Internet Job Search Mistakes to Avoid
  8. Get A New Job - Career Choices
  9. Electronic Resume Writing Tips That Boost Your Interview Appointment Success
  10. Travel Light to Work
  11. Sawbones
  12. Whiners Need Not Apply
  13. Discover your passion
  14. Workplace Violence - 8 Tips For Spotting Early Warning Signs
  15. Your Best Job Search Tool May Be Your Computer
  16. Practice Speaking
  17. Smokin’ Up a Storm: Clothing, Smokers, and the Job Interview
  18. Resume That Effectively Promotes You!
  19. What is Contract Programming? An Alternative to the Conformity of Everyday Employment
  20. Ten Great Careers For Computer “Geeks"
  21. The Six Figure Job Search
  22. An RX For Your Résumé
  23. Powerful Phone Interviews
  24. Your Self-Image in the Workplace
  25. Thank-You Notes: An Integral Part of Your Career Design
More related feeds
My form of time travel (not what u think)
this also would work for moving forward in time as if you looked in the other direction you just met the light coming from the other direction faster. This is my theory, i may be missing alot of facts, but im only 17 and don't have alot ...

Press Release: July 2008 Newsletter - Summer, Summer, Summer ...
Needless to say, this is the most fun yarn i've EVER worked with. Not only do i love the colors, but it's soooo soft and light to work with. I'm actually considering doing a sweater with it. (Ok -maybe 'starting' a sweater :)) ...

"It All Started With a Mouse"
Not to mention I have told my two children endless times we can't take very much and must travel light, so I should probably follow my own advice. I don't need to fill my suitcase half full with multiple skeins of yarn! ...

Preparing For Canada
I am travelling light on my trip to Canada again this year. The last time I went to Canada for a month, I brought two carry-on bags. One was full of camera equipment and the other had a pair of pants, a few T-shirts, and some socks and ...

Planning a Successful Holiday
Try to travel light. Use luggage on wheels—it’s easier to handle. Always pack essentials—like your medication and a change of clothing—in your hand luggage in case your suitcase is delayed or lost. Consider booking assistance at the ...

Lake Atitlan and San Marcos
What a beautiful place When I got into my room 6night with a shared bath the most expensive place is around 40night I noticed the light didnt work. When I looked at the ceiling light there was no light bulb. ...

HOW DID THEY GET HERE?
The problem lies in the immense distance of space one would have to travel to get here. And this would mean that such space travelers would possess knowledge of a technology far ahead of what we know. A beam of light, a photon — can ...

Thomas Hardye - holograms and ears
After working in Physics and Astronomy, students met with Dr Steve Dorney - where they modelled sound travelling through different materials. The Thomas Hardye students then got to experience the anechoic chamber ...

Predator/Varmint Hunting :: Picking spots to call?
Travel or bedrooms. The travel properties are properties I have seen or have reports of coyotes moving at first light. A farmer feeding his cows at first light seeing the coyote, school bus driver, etc. These are properties that coyotes ...

time travel...
An amazing Air-cushion invention allows body freedom at work or play. Light, neat, cool, sanitary. Durable, cheap. Day and night protection helps Nature support weakened muscles gently but surely. No risk. Sent on Trial! ...

 


 

© 2007 articlesreader.com - All Rights Reserved