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Breaking Down - It Makes Breakthrough Possible

Topic: Personal DevelopmentBy Kathy CaprinoPublished Recently added

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Are you a professional woman longing for a change? You're not alone. Seven out of 10 women today are facing a major turning point. After devoting years to building successful careers, they feel that their lives and identities no longer work. As a result, most are facing at least one of 12 hidden work-life crises, including chronic health problems, financial bondage, and painful losses of the "real me." A professional crisis-or breakdown -is sounding an important wake-up call that, when answered, can lead to lasting change in how you work and live. In other words, breaking down opens the door to breaking through. Breaking Down A true professional crisis is more than a "tough time." For most women, it feels like a no-tu ing-back situation-a point in time that demands reckoning and reevaluation. So how do you know when you've reached that point? If you frequently find yourself saying, "I can't do this"-the desperate cry, or negative mantra, of work-life crisis-and consistently have deep-down feelings of disempowerment, you may be experiencing one or more of 12 hidden crises. Among them: • Suffering from chronic health problems. Failing health-a chronic illness or ailment-that won't respond to treatment. The mantra: "I can't resolve my health problems." • Losing your "voice." Contending with a crippling inability to speak upunable to be an advocate for yourself or others, for fear of criticism, rejection, or punishment. The mantra: "I can't speak up without being punished." • Facing abuse or mistreatment. Being treated badly, even intolerably, at work-and choosing to stay. The mantra: "I can't stop this cycle of mistreatment." • Feeling trapped by financial fears. Remaining in a negative situation solely because of money. The mantra: "I can't get out of this financial trap." • Wasting your real talents. Realizing your work no longer fits and desperately wanting to use your natural talents and abilities. The mantra: "I can't use my real talents." • Struggling to balance life and work. Trying-and failing-to balance it all, and feeling like you're letting down who and what matters most. The mantra: "I can't balance my life and work." • Doing work you hate. Longing to reconnect with the "real you"-and do work you love. The mantra: "I can't do work that I love." Breaking Through A professional crisis is telling you that change must occur-now-but that doesn't mean it will be easy (most likely, it won't). Still, one step at a time, you can begin to create and experience your own breakthrough. Here are 10 tips for getting started: • Listen to your body. Your body is always communicating, but are you listening? From minor aches and pains to major forms of disease or malaise, pay attention to what an ailment may be saying to you-not just about your body, but your mind and spirit, too. • Heed your hunches. Your intuition, or inner voice, is an invaluable source of information. Start developing a keen awareness of the "dialogue" within you-even asking questions and waiting for the answers. Rarely, if ever, will your gut-level hunches lead you astray. Follow them! • Say "no" to an either-or life. Are you focusing on just one aspect of yourself? Don't do it. This is not an "either-or" life-it's an "everything" life. Re-connect with a talent or dimension of yourself that you love, but has gone by the wayside while you over-identified with a single role or function. • Speak Up. Speaking the truth sounds simple, but it's not. Still, it's essential to learn to express yourself, or you'll feel stuck. Throughout the day, at home or work, ask yourself, "What do I want to say here?" Then take a risk and put it out there. • Embrace "good enough." Many women strive, even slave, to be the best-driving themselves crazy in the process. If you're one of them, "practice" accepting good enough. Sooner or later, it will be just that-good enough! • Figure out what you're most afraid of. Get in the cage with your fears. One by one, take them on and face what you're most afraid of. How is it driving you, limiting you, and wearing you out? Deal with these issues once and for all. You are then sure to get unstuck. • Get real about money. Money is simply an energy form-with no particular qualities in and of itself-yet it can be the means to either limiting or expanding yourself. Take time to understand your own beliefs and history around money. (Are they healthy?) And even if it's not the ideal situation yet, find a way to balance what you need to do with what you want to do-honoring your integrity and your heart along the way. • Stop making excuses. We're all good at making excuses for not acting on our dreams. Take a long, hard look at your own excuses, see them for what they are, and let them go. • Be open to angels. Odds are, there are a number of "angels" in your lifepeople who love and support you, believe in you, and will give you the gentle push you need to venture into the unknown. Be open to their help and act on it. You might be steeped in doubt or fear, but they're not. • Find a role model. You might already have a role model-from your own mother to Mother Teresa. If not, get serious about finding one. Look for someone who brings to light the qualities and successes you admire and aspire to, and whose story resonates. Finally, relax! It's not all up to you. There is a "higher dimension"-someone or something bigger than you-to help you break through and reach for your dreams. So, step back, let go, and say "Yes!"

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About the Author

Kathy Caprino, MA, is a nationally-recognized women’s work-life expert and author of Breakdown, Breakthrough: The Professional Woman’s Guide to Claiming a Life of Passion, Power, and Purpose (Berrett-Koehler, 2008, www.breakdownbreakthrough.com). Founder and President of Ellia Communications, Inc. -- a women’s career and work-life coaching and consulting company dedicated to helping women achieve breakthrough -- Caprino is a trained psychotherapist, seasoned career and executive coach, and sought-after writer and speaker on women’s issues. She is a popular blogger on business, workplace, and career topics and trends, and as a top media source, she has appeared in more than 100 leading newspapers and magazines and on national television. Contact her on the Web at http://www.elliacommunications.com.

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