Saturday, April 11, 2020
Career Management Are YOU Lazy - Work It Daily
Career Management Are YOU Lazy - Work It Daily Career Management Are YOU Lazy - Work It Daily Career Management Help Warning! Iâm about to speak in code. We like to think of ourselves as: âNot interested in making big moneyâ âNot overly ambitiousâ âFocused more on life than workâ Code for all these excuses is âIâm lazy.â Related: 6 Career Management Hacks That Will Get You Ahead Being lazy is something we donât like to admit to ourselves, much less to our own mother (who will love us no matter what, except when being lazy). We will substitute other words and rationalization for our behavior. You think we canât tell, but we can. Youâre lazy, and second to bad body odor, no one really wants to be around that, even if youâre charming. (OK, maybe if youâre charming, but only then.) Career Management Help If you're in the ranks of people of whom Iâm describing, you need to pay attention to what Iâm about to share. Someone needs to give it to you on the chin. You may have reached a point in your adult life where you realized you donât care if you get ahead, excel on the job, get a promotion, or even much of a salary. Lazy is about effort, and you discovered you simply didnât want to put in any. You were willing to forego these things as a trade off. As a lazy person, you have learned to do things to try to hide the blatant truth about yourself. You have tried to look like you didnât care if others passed you by. Perhaps you even attempted to look like those things were too materialistic. The great thing about rationalization is that it seems to sound good and even logical to some extent. To you perhaps. Iâm here to expose your ugly truth. We really can tell. As much as lazy people think they've hidden the truth about themselves, at some level the rest of us know. We pretty much let you keep thinking that we canât see what youâre all about. You didn't ask âdoes this rationalization make me look lazy?â Here is some of the other code this signifies. It says that while you might truly just not want to do anything, it says you havenât checked in to life. You donât get it. Weâre at our best when we are productive and contributing. Weâre even better when weâre so passionate about our work that we canât wait to get to it again. It says you might be afraid to try or might not be able to stand the failure that comes with striving. What youâre missing is that it will make you feel great about yourself. Not because you kept up with other people or met some type of social standard. You would feel great because you had something you strived to achieve and did it. As a co-worker, you aren't our first pick to work with. You canât be trusted. If I know youâre lazy, Iâm not sure what you will or wonât do. Many times, in your attempt to look like something you aren't, you may inflate what you know or will do. Most of the time you donât know what you will or wonât do. Your rationalizations are filed under âIgnore.â You've preordained your outcome because of your âlazy-speak.â We can all see through this and because, even if youâre charming, what good is working with someone you canât trust? The best people I've had a chance to work with are generally running faster than I am. Where does this leave us? If youâre lazy, youâre missing out on a big chunk of life. I recognize some people think there is a magical dividing line between work and life, but Iâm here to say the line doesn't exist. This is your life or at least a big part of it. Stop trying to fool yourself. The effort you think will be so painful will be the best time of your life, if you just let it. Try some career management. Fall in love with your work. This post was originally published at an earlier date. Photo Credit: Shutterstock Have you joined our career growth club?Join Us Today!
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