Tuesday, May 12, 2020
The Top 5 Regrets of Midlife Professionals - Kathy Caprino
The Top 5 Regrets of Midlife Professionals Part of Kathy Caprinos series Finding Brave To Build Your Best Life and Career Iâve spent 14 years now focused on career coaching, teaching and training, helping mid-career professionals âdig deep, discover their right work, and illuminate the world with it.â Iâve seen several core themes emerge around what makes mid-career professionals (and middle-aged people in general) feel the deepest regret. Below are the top five regrets Iâve heard from mid-career professionals around the world: 1. I wish I hadnât listened to other people about what I should study and pursue. Many people believe that when you reach 40, youâll certainly be living your own life, and making your own authentic choices. Sadly, Iâve found that it isnât necessarily true. So many thousands of people around the world feel deep regret and pain because theyâre actually living someone elseâs life â" not their own. Most typically, theyâre living a life their parents told them to live, and engaging in careers their authority figures demanded or strongly encouraged they pursue. Iâve heard from so many people aged 40-55 who now realize theyâre in the completely wrong career, pursuing the wrong goals, because they studied in college what their parents and authority figures told them was the right thing, for security, stability and status. They also admit that there was a some unconscious or âhiddenâ cultural mandate they somehow felt, to become a doctor, lawyer, engineer, architect, etc., for the recognition and status that their parents thought would be achieved in these fields. The reality is that these professionals didnât muster the courage to change directions, or say âNo, I donât want this!â And now many years have passed and theyâre still not living life as they want to. To live a happy, rewarding life on your own terms, itâs critical to starting saying âyesâ to your authentic beliefs and values, and stop living someone elseâs life that feels so wrong., even if itâs the one your beloved parents wanted for you 2. I wish I hadnât worked so hard and missed out on so much. So many men and women in middle age share that they regret what theyâve missed out on in life, by working so hard. They missed being in the fabric of their childrenâs lives. Or they missed the chance to have children. They missed the opportunity to build true intimacy and closeness with their spouses, family and friends. They missed experiencing adventure, travel, enjoyment, vitality, learning, spiritual growth â" not having the chance to stop and relish life, nature, good health, peace, or relaxation. They missed so much and sacrificed so much to pursue work goals that now feel meaningless and empty. Iâve seen that too that when people get to the end of their lives â" in their 80s and 90s â" theyâre not thinking at all about the work goals they strived so hard to achieve. Theyâre thinking about love and family, about the people that matter deeply to them, and how they made a difference to these people. And they deeply regret what they didnât do with and for these loved ones. 3. I wish I hadnât let my fears stop me from making change. We have many different fears that stop us from taking action, but the biggest fears are around failure, loss, and pain. Mid-career professionals share with me that they have so much fear and resistance around making change, particularly if it means they have to stretch out of their comfort zone, speak up and stand up for themselves. They fear failing, going broke, not being able to care for their families financially. They fear leaving their âcomfort zoneâ yet they see that perpetuating the status quo is excruciating and damaging. The fears mid-career professionals, particularly women, often emerge from a lack of healthy boundaries, from intense people-pleasing behavior and a drive toward âperfectionistic overfunctioningâ â" doing more than is necessary, healthy or appropriate. Until we can get in the cage with our fears and address them head on, fear will keep us stuck in quiet desperation. 4. I wish I had learned how to address toxic situations and people. When I wrote the post â6 Toxic Behaviors That Push People Away,â I heard from thousands of people (and still do) who shared how toxic their lives and relationships have become. And they shared that they have no idea what to do about it. Toxicity is rampant today, and so much of it comes from stress and from negative, damaging ways we were raised and parented, and what we were taught (or not taught) about acceptable and unacceptable behavior. It also emerges from people whose self-esteem has been severely hurtâ" through childhood pain, trauma in later life, and crushing experiences at work that shatter them. Toxicity â" at work, in relationships, and in our own thoughts â" hurts us terribly, but often we donât see it clearly enough until our bodies break down, or other crises hit that focus us to take brave new action to learn to love, protect, and heal ourselves. 5. I wish I hadnât let myself become so trapped around money. Finally, the money issue â" this comes up in almost every conversation I have with mid-career professionals. Their fears around money, or their slavery to it, generate deep regret. People share that they know theyâre not living the life they long to, and theyâre sick and depressed about it, but they simply canât see a way out because theyâre trapped about money. Either they feel they need to keep making exactly the same amount as they are today, so they wonât change directions or leave their toxic jobs or careers, or theyâre desperate because theyâre not making enough, so they want to pursue something âsafeâ that they know will make them miserable in the end. Iâve learned that our relationship with money goes very deep, and stems directly from our wealth programming and what we learned from childhood about it. The negative, fear-based stories we tell ourselves about money keep playing out in our lives, despite all our best efforts. If we donât get to the bottom of our own money story, and heal it, we remain trapped in unhappy, desperate situations for the entirety of our lives. If youâre like me, when you hit 50, it was a huge awakening. I felt as if I were suddenly in a new âclubâ and that club allowed me to be stronger, braver, and bolder, and stop wasting time. Suddenly, seeing that the number of years you have ahead of you in life is smaller than whatâs behind you, is a very motivating experience. For many, it elicits an urgency to address whatâs wrong in our lives â" what makes us sick, sad, depressed and angry. It catalyzes us to muster the courage, fortitude and commitment to finally do whatâs required to start living the lives we long to. And for that, we need to brave up. To learn if you are experiencing one or more of the 7 damaging power gaps that keep professionals stuck in regret and helplessness (98% of professionals surveyed are!), take my new Power Gaps Survey, and join me in a Career Breakthrough Coaching program that will help you transform your career. CLICK HERE to learn more about working together and complete the application. And donât miss a single episode of my weekly Finding Brave.
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