Words
From the Front
Kristin
Bole
Executive
VP DHR
International
http://www.DHRintl.com
Three months into
this new career I'm remembering that there's always
a 3-month low. I developed this theory in the Peace
Corps, watching people freak out, then vow to stay
an extra year, then freak out again.
My theory is this:
There are very specific highs and lows that
come with any new situation which follow the learning
curve of adjusting to a new culture. The
truth is, it doesn't apply only to living overseas
but is also very applicable to starting
a new job. And yep, here I am again.
Here's the picture:
For the first few months in a new career, everything's
exciting. It's new, it's challenging, and you have
no concept that it might actually be beyond you.
By the end of 3 months, you've been in it
long enough to know exactly how hard it is, how
grossly unprepared you are, and how exhausting it
is to change everything in your life. However, you
haven't been in it long enough to have leapt the
hurdle and gained the real experience it takes.
Your first response:
Bolt. It's a basic fight or flight reaction to stress,
but for some reason culture-shock stress creates
only one of those responses - flight. You just want
to get out of there. And the truth is, changing
careers is a form of culture shock. Your old job
suddenly sounds nice again. Your old skills feel
familiar and valuable. You still don't really speak
the language of the new place. And since your new
skills are still in their infant stages, your old
ones also seem to be the core of your self-esteem.
Suddenly, it all just seems too hard. You think
you're too old for this. Whatever gave you the idea
that this would be a step forward? Suddenly it becomes
painfully clear to you that this is an obvious step
backwards. Why didn't your family warn you? Why
didn't your friends? Why did this company think
you'd be able to do this? You fooled them all, and
you're paying the price.
Ok, so step
back, breathe and relax.
The first
thing to do is to remember that this is the hardest
thing anyone ever does. And the fact is, most people
don't have the guts to do it for precisely that
reason.
Just as people take
pets and favorite belongings to new country, you
need to take something with you to your new job
that reminds you that you were great before. Take
time to put up those photos of family. Hang your
awards on the wall where you can see them.
But mostly, take
time for yourself. Do something each day
that's tangible to improve your new skills (the
equivalent of learning a new word each day in a
new language), and to remind yourself of your old
skills. Go to the gym. If you've been riding
your bike since you were 6, ride your bike. If you've
been baking cookies since you were in high school,
bake cookies. If playing with a chemistry set was
something that you've always loved, go buy one.
Do things
that are EASY and TANGIBLE, with real results. It
sounds silly, but it works. Pretty soon, you'll
realize that you're at your 6-month high, your confidence
has returned, and you've made it through the hardest
point in your culture shock.
Copyright
2004, Joel Garfinkle, All Rights Reserved
Joel Garfinkle leads managers and executives to
higher levels of professional and personal achievement.
Partial client list: BofA, HP, GAP, Citigroup, Eli
Lilly. Click here for his Executive
Coaching Services.
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