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OPINION
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5 Signs That You're Stuck at Work
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Sandra Ford Walston |
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Jul 09 | In
tough economic times, it is easy to feel stuck—stuck in
the wrong job, stuck in a failing company or stuck in the unemployment
line. But a slow economy does not necessarily mean that you have
to remain stuck. In fact, getting stuck at work usually has very
little to do with the state of
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Sandra
Ford Walston, The Courage Expert, innovator of STUCKThinking™,
is an organizational effectiveness/ learning consultant,
speaker,
corporate trainer and courage coach, specialising
in understanding women’s leadership issues,
courage behaviors, individual personalities and leadership
styles that focus on the tricks and traps of the human
condition.
Sandra
is the internationally published author of bestseller
“COURAGE: The Heart and Spirit of Every Woman.”
Her second book is currently agent represented. Sandra
writes for “Chief
Learning Officer” and “Strategic
Finance” magazines, and she posts a monthly
Courage Blog
on her own her own site and for PINK
magazine and successtelevision.com.
Sandra provides skill-based programs for public and
private businesses, including Caterpillar, Inc., Auburn
University, Procter & Gamble, Wyoming Department
of Health Public Nurses, Farmers Insurance, Wide Open
West and Hitachi Consulting. She is a Newfield Network
Coach.
Ms.
Walston is qualified to administer and interpret the
Myers-Briggs Type Indicator® and is certified
as an Enneagram
teacher and she enjoys applying insights from both
systems to her work. With over eleven years of experience
with finance professionals, she instructs for the
University of Denver Graduate Tax Program Continuing
Professional Education courses and she formerly taught
for the Colorado Society of CPAs.
Her
Home Page is www.sandrawalston.com
or sign up for her courage blog.
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the
economy, and many of us may be stuck without realising it. Let’s
look at the five main reasons why people get stuck and what you
can do to overcome these obstacles.
1. Uncertainty gnaws at us and manipulates us at work, many times
without us realising what is happening. We question issues, we doubt
ourselves, and we stay stuck! Uncertainty creates a spiraling of
unnecessary suffering. Uncertainly lives in unseen steps until we
realise that every day is a day of uncertainty. Only the ego mistakenly
believes that you have a schedule set in stone when you walk out
the door to go to work. Why is it that way? The ego strives for
certainty. Only by holding yourself accountable can you enable yourself
to move out of uncertainty. Holding yourself accountable requires
taking personal responsibility for your life experiences. In other
words, accountability is not for someone else.
Obstacle: uncertainty
Courage-action: hold
yourself 100% accountable
2. Do you confess your shortcomings and missteps? Or, for example,
if you lack knowledge about a topic, do you respond in a deceptive
manner that protects your image? The honest response would be to
confess your vulnerability by admitting that you do not know the
answer. Confessing is good for the spirit when done in a timely
manner and with positive intent. The process helps us face the truth.
We take responsibility for what is happening with our spirit and
address those missteps that collect unhealthy energy. In other words,
we put an end to our manipulative behaviors so that we can reveal
our vulnerabilities with a calm dignity. Vulnerability comes in
many forms—acknowledging your unhappiness, learning to move
beyond past failures and refusing to manipulate others. “When
we admit our downside, others cannot attack us there. As a consequence,
we feel emotionally less vulnerable, and more safe and secure.”
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Obstacle: manipulation
Courage-action: reveal
your vulnerability
3. Change can be intimidating. Change takes us out of familiar territory,
and the inertia that keeps us stuck in unfulfilling jobs feels safe
by comparison. If intimidation is holding you back, look for a tough
project to tackle. Before you jump in, stop to reflect. The commitment
to reflection will provide a clearer picture of what you need to
do to get where you need to be. This reflective opportunity provides
discernment to the situation by weighing the advantages and disadvantages.
Obstacle: intimidation
Courage-action: take
on the tough project
4.
You know you’re stuck when you begin to doubt yourself. In
this case, the crucial manifestation of your courage is your ability
to establish higher standards. Failing to challenge ourselves to
meet high standards keeps us stuck in a place of unrealised potential.
In other words, we all have unrealised potential, and if we do not
establish personal standards for ourselves, we simply cannot break
away from the self-doubt that undermines our efforts to manifest
that potential. The obstacle of self-doubt can keep us stuck for
a lifetime if we fail to respond to these opportunities in courage.
Obstacle: self-doubt
Courage-action: establish
higher standards
5. Do you seek out what is good for you? Or do you follow your desires
to the point of suffering adverse consequences? “Suffering
is due to dragging one’s spiritual feet and the ego’s
insistence on having its own way.” 2 We
all have desires shaped by emotional, spiritual or physical scarring.
The key to breaking free of unhealthy desires is to recognise them
for what they are instead of slipping into denial. The pilgrimage
out of denial requires you to challenge yourself at the deepest
levels by developing a meditative practice. The simple reflective
process reveals the scripts that keep you stuck, thereby enabling
you to rewrite your scripts. Created by the ego, these B-movie scripts
define your beliefs about yourself, others and the world. Think
of scripts as an undercurrent eroding the fertile soil of your true
Self. Many B-movie scripts avoid courage in favor of denial.
Becoming
an observer of your scripts requires effort. Slipping into a perpetual
state of denial is easier than turning the spotlight on yourself
and recognising your automatic patterns. But by identifying these
patterns, you “own” them, and you can pinpoint how they
affect others. Moving from denial, you learn to identify how you
created your stressful life and eventually learn how to break the
patterns that created the stress. How do you start this? You learn
how to exit bad situations quickly. Then, and you can focus on unknown
possibilities in the present instead of projecting your happiness
into some future longing. Are you disinclined to accept unhappiness?
Obstacle: denial
Courage-action: exit
bad situations quickly. 
1 Hawkins, David, M.D., Ph.D., Truth vs Falsehood:
how to tell the difference (Ontario, Canada: Axial Publishing Canada,
2005), 238.
2 Hawkins, David, M.D., Ph.D., Transcending
the Levels of Consciousness: The Stairway to Enlightenment (Sedona:
Veritas Publication, 2006), 331.
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