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Blog

Prop Them Up Until They Get Their Balance

December 24, 2014 by Jim Peacock Leave a Comment

New Harbor 031

I heard this quote recently and it has been running through my head since. “Prop them up until they get their balance“. It hit home to me as a career counselor and coach. Much of my work is helping people “get their balance” so they can move forward on their own. I love this visual, as I evolve from a “counselor” or “advisor” who gives something, to more of a “coach” who encourages my students and clients to look within and figure it out themselves.

How did I prop someone up?

  • Helped a client come up with four questions to ask in an informational interview
  • Guided a student in writing an email to alumni asking for advice
  • Helped a Boomer / mid-life career changer “discover” the value of their own network by uncovering numerous serendipitous moments in their lives positively affected by people they knew
  • Encouraged a student to try an informational interview with a faculty member before stepping out and doing one with alumni they do not know
  • What have you done to ‘prop someone up’?

Each person is different. Some people simply need a few resources and they are off and running. Others simply need a ‘reframing’ of the situation to see it in a more positive light. Others are “off-kilter” and need a few suggestions or open-ended questions to get them thinking. The key as a career practitioner is to keep the ownership of the issue with the person and not try to give them answers that worked for you or others in the past. To truly listen to what they are saying & thinking and help them figure out how to move forward.

What they present to us often is not the real issue. If you view yourself as a “propper upper” first, you realize that we are often a sounding board for others, asking the questions that no one else has asked them. Yes, often we are the first people to ask these questions

  • “What skills do you want to use in a job?”
  • “What did you love / like about past jobs you’ve had and is there a connection or theme?”
  • “How can you leverage your strengths and passions to do something in the next 3 weeks?  3 months? 6  months?“

What are some of your favorite questions you ask that helps a person see more clearly?
That “props them up until they get their balance”.
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Jim Peacock is the Principal at Peak-Careers Consulting and writes a monthly newsletter for career practitioners. Peak-Careers offers discussion-based online seminars for career practitioners focused on meeting continuing education needs for CCSP, GCDF and BCC certified professionals as well as workshops for career practitioners and individual career coaching.

Sign up here to receive my  TOP 10 TIPS WHEN WORKING WITH AN UNDECIDED PERSON.  You can also receive the career practitioners newsletter which includes a variety of career topics, industry news, interesting events, and more. 

Filed Under: Career Tagged With: career coaching, college student advice, encouraging, helping clients get their balance, supporting clients

Fly-Fishing The 41st. Around the World on the 41st Parallel. By James Prosek

December 24, 2014 by Jim Peacock Leave a Comment

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An interesting read. The author is a Yale graduate who has written a few books on fishing but he gave this one a different ‘spin’. Connecticut is on the 41st parallel so he decided to go around the world fishing that parallel for trout.

He fishes much of the time with an Austrian who is a amateur expert on native trout. Johannes loves to snorkel in streams and net trout and then take pictures of them, snip a fin for a DNA sample, and then return them to the stream. He is a fanatic about finding native trout and James the author is in good company.

[Read more…] about Fly-Fishing The 41st. Around the World on the 41st Parallel. By James Prosek

Filed Under: Book Reviews

Unretirement: How Baby Boomers Are Changing The Way We Think About Work, Community, and the Good Life by Chris Farrell

November 1, 2014 by Jim Peacock 2 Comments

unretirement

A thoughtful look at Baby Boomers from an economic point of view. Chris Farrel is a senior economics contributor at Marketplace on American Public Media’s radio programs.

This book has so much food for thought and is an optimistic look at what boomers can look forward to, an engaged, vibrant, and productive time of life…if we choose to. Here are a couple of key quotes.

[Read more…] about Unretirement: How Baby Boomers Are Changing The Way We Think About Work, Community, and the Good Life by Chris Farrell

Filed Under: Book Reviews

If you are happier will it lead you to your “purpose”?

October 28, 2014 by Jim Peacock 5 Comments

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My wife thinks I was crazy to register for a college class right now with all that I have to do. She’s right of course. But I could not stop myself from registering for my first MOOC* on the Science of Happiness. (*Massive Open Online Course.) UC-Berkeley stated that over 10,000 people had signed up. I can guarantee you there are not 10,000 in week 7. (I am in week 7, but the class is in week 8.)

Studying happiness with research and science to back it up has been wonderful. What has been more amazing is how intertwined this is with discovering your “purpose” in life. As a career coach or career counselor, here are three specific things you can do to help your students/clients to be happier and three things to think about in helping them discover purpose and meaning in their lives.

Research shows that happiness has a “set point” in all of us at about 50%. This means that we are born with a certain happiness set point that is not moveable. 10% of our happiness is our environment, where we live, with whom we live & work, etc.. This leaves a WHOPPING 40% that we actually have control over! Yahoo! Here are three action steps you can take to increase your happiness that I have learned in the class I do not have time for 🙂

[Read more…] about If you are happier will it lead you to your “purpose”?

Filed Under: Career Tagged With: finding meaning, happiness, Life Coaching, meaningful work, purpose in life

Undecided? Or open to opportunities? 5 things you can do to be “open to opportunities.”

September 17, 2014 by Jim Peacock 8 Comments

Here are some points I try to keep in mind when working with undecided individuals.

Are you really “undecided” about your career choices or are you “open to opportunities?” If you are not sure what you want to do, the first step is to change your mindset. I truly believe most people are NOT undecided.

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It does not take me long to determine if a person is more “people focused” or more “math / science / structure” focused and all I need to do is ask them if they’d like to do something that is the OPPOSITE of their personality and they say “eeewww…that’s gross” (as Jimmy Fallon says).

Well if you know what you do NOT want to do, then down deep, you must know what you DO want to do. You just need to find the right words to get your head around it and change your thinking.

1. Think skills first, not occupations or job titles. The world we live in today is very different than 20 years ago. Employers are looking for a variety of skill sets to increase their production or productivity. If you focus on your skills and can articulate them to a potential employer, you will clearly have their attention and you might be surprised at the variety of jobs that require those skills.

Think about past accomplishments that you are most proud of. What skills were you using when you did it? We naturally gravitate to doing things we are good at and then we do them over again because it feels good. Pay attention to this and trust your hunches (see #3 below). Look for broad skill trends as well as specific skills (i.e. I am very good at explaining things to groups of people in a helping relationship).

[Read more…] about Undecided? Or open to opportunities? 5 things you can do to be “open to opportunities.”

Filed Under: Career Tagged With: happenstance, intentional serendipity, open to opportunities, serendipity, skills for work, trusting your instincts, undecided

Guns, Germs, and Steel. By Jared Diamond

September 17, 2014 by Jim Peacock Leave a Comment

guns-germs-steel

Who would have thought that one reason civilization grew faster in EurAsia is that the continent is laid out ‘east to west’ vs North America / South America and Australia which is  ‘north to south’?

Who would have believed that the domestication of animals was so complex and vital to human development?

We all hate germs but I didn’t realize how much of a factor germs were in European development across the world.

[Read more…] about Guns, Germs, and Steel. By Jared Diamond

Filed Under: Book Reviews

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