Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Year-End Career Reflections & Resolutions

Excellent reflection found at:

https://mail.google.com/mail/ca/u/0/?shva=1#inbox/13bf5f8a1df81b79


Year-End Career Reflections & Resolutions
Kevin Brennfleck and Kay Marie Brennfleck
Your future can be better than your past or your present. As this year winds down, and a fresh year unfolds, 
it is a natural time to take some to reflect on your career and calling, and to set goals for the coming year. 
Here are some ideas for your own list of New Year's resolutions. Together, you and the Lord can transform 
your life.

Five Resolutions for Discovering & Living Your Calling

1. Take a fresh look at your God-given design. God has created you for a specific purpose, and is in the 
ongoing business of transforming you so that you can carry out His will for your life. Discovering your vocational 
calling begins with having a clear picture of how God has designed you. Within you resides a special combination 
of gifts-talents, interests, skills, personality traits, and much more-that is the foundation of your vocational 
calling. There has never been anyone else like you in human history, and there never will be another you again. 
You are called to be "you": the unique, gifted, capable person who was designed by God and created to fulfill 
a divinely appoint purpose with your life. (Live Your Calling contains six self-assessments to help you clarify 
and deepen your understanding of your design.) Other powerful options include professional career testing 
that can help you identify and match your interests and motivations with job and career choices that fit your 
God-given design.

2. Stretch the boundaries of your comfort zone. We humans are easily entrapped by our comfort zone. 
We become defined by our habits and routines, and resist even considering the unfamiliar. Jesus never hesitated
 to call people out of their comfort zones; in fact, He specialized in it! Hearing God's calling is difficult if you are 
blockaded in your comfort zone. Start small in breaking free: drive a new way to work; eat lunch with someone 
different; take time to read about a career you have considered; start a new hobby or activity. You are the biggest 
barrier in your own life; doing new things will help you see that you can make changes in your life and aren't 
limited by your current comfort zone.

3. Look for needs you can meet each day.  Our human nature encourages us to focus on our own needs. 
God, however, calls us to direct our attention to the needs of others; to be the servant of all (Mark 9:35). 
Needs come in all shapes and sizes. See who God brings into your path whom you can help. As you serve 
others in small and not-so-small ways, pay attention to what brings you a sense of joy and fulfillment. 
A key part of finding your vocational calling is discovering the types of needs you especially enjoy meeting.

4. Develop "an attitude of gratitude." Take time to write down everything for which you are grateful in your life. 
Ask God to bring to mind every blessing-large and small-that He has given you. Cultivating a grateful heart and 
mind will help you see how God has been at work in your life, and will enlarge your sense of trust in God's 
faithfulness for your future.

5. Start today taking prayerful action. "Tomorrow" may seem like the best day to start making changes in 
your life, but it's not! Procrastination is a dream-killer. Big changes are usually the result of taking lots of little 
steps. Break your goal into "bite-sized" steps. Find a small step you can do today and find a support person
 to help you take it. (The bigger the challenge, the more support you will need to accomplish the goal.) Living 
your calling requires combining prayer with action. Stepping out in faith will help mature you into becoming the 
person you need to be to do the things God is calling you to do.

If you would like professional assistance with discovering your calling, we invite you to look into our 
career coaching services. After reading about our services, you can schedule a free consultation 
session to discuss which career services would best meet your needs. We would consider it a privilege
 to help you discover who God has created you to be and what He has designed you to do!

Excerpts from Live Your Calling (2005) by Kevin and Kay Marie Brennfleck. Used by permission of 
Jossey-Bass, a Wiley imprint.
© Article copyright by Kevin and Kay Marie Brennfleck, www.ChristianCareerCenter.com. All rights reserved. 
The above information is intended for personal use only. No commercial use of this information is authorized 
without written permission.

Kevin Brennfleck and Kay Marie Brennfleck, National Certified Career Counselors, are the authors of
 Live Your Calling: A Practical Guide to Finding and Fulfilling Your Mission in Life.T
heir websites, www.ChristianCareerCenter.comwww.ChurchJobsOnline.com, andwww.ChristianJobFair.com
feature hundreds of job listings from churches, ministries, and Christian employers; a resume bank; and many
 other career/job search resources and articles. They also offer career coaching and testing to help you discover 
work that fits your God-given design, as well as assistance with writing a powerful resume, interviewing effectively, 
finding job openings, and other aspects of a successful job search.  You can schedule a 
career services consultation today!  

No comments:

Post a Comment