
Right from a very young age we’re asked ‘what do you want to be when you grow up?’ I can’t speak for anyone else, but at 40 years old, I still don’t know the answer to this question.
If I’d have followed my 8 year old self and her dreams, I’d be sitting in a kiosk at a National Park somewhere along the British coastline taking money off people wanting to park their cars so that they could spend the day at the beach, either that or I’d be swinging through the air on a trapeze. Maybe the latter isn’t too far from reality, but at no point did I say ‘mummy, I want to work on improving risk management in British Government’.
I actually had no idea what I wanted to do for a job all through school. I considered being a teacher, but a four year old, well versed in an array of profanities, put that idea firmly to bed. I also thought about working in a health resort/gym but after realising that folding starched towels has a similar effect on me as nails down a blackboard, I was back to square one.
I finished school and went to university choosing a degree based on my love of numbers, logical reasoning and quadratic equations. It could have been suggested that my A level results reflected that a love of something doesn’t necessarily mean that you’re any good at it, but I was a girl on a mission. I opted for a course a little less challenging than straight maths (which my brain might have exploded doing) and chose something that would help me to potentially get a foot in the door of a number of professions. I believe that these choices, albeit stumbled upon, helped set me up for a wonderful and varied career.
Not so long ago, I asked my son the very same question that was asked of me at a young age and his response was delightful.
‘I want to be a vet…and a builder and a policeman and a gymnastics worker and a camel rider‘.
I must admit that the camel rider took me a little by surprise but his tone told me that right in that moment he could genuinely see himself doing any or all of those jobs. He didn’t go away and think about it, or ask himself ‘what job will pay me lots of money?’ or ‘I wonder if they do salary sacrificing?’ He answered, purely and simply, from the heart and chose jobs that he thought would give him joy or which he could relate to because of his own childhood experiences. Little does he know but his five year old brain was pretty smart to not limit his options to only one possible vocation. I have no doubt he will have a fulfilled career, whatever he chooses.
The conversation with my son, combined with a young and impressionable team member seeking guidance in the direction her life ‘should’ take, got me thinking. Why, as (young) adults do we often feel the need to have all of the answers, all of the time?
Surely the best thing we can do is reflect on what we have learnt along the way and try very hard to not make the same mistake twice; knowing that we still will at least once or twice. We can use the experiences we have had to help us make better informed decisions for our future; helping us to eliminate the non-starters and the ‘really bad choices’ from our list of possibilities.
The other advantage that we have over the five year olds is that we have an awareness of the ‘now’. The now, actually maybe all we have and that’s why it is important to enjoy every moment, find the good in things, let go of the anger and smile; always smile. While we may have hopes and dreams for what tomorrow may bring, right now is what’s really important.
So late on a Sunday night last week I tried to offer the best unqualified advice I could to an 18 year old who felt a little lost.
- It’s ok to not have all of the answers. You’re 18, live in the moment and have lots of fun finding some.
- Don’t try to grow up too quickly. The house, the car, the wedding, the husband and the babies will happen in time and I can guarantee they will be nothing like you imagine.
- If it doesn’t make you happy, let it go; but don’t walk away from something just because you’re bored or it’s inconvenient right at this moment or because it’s hard work; let it go because it’s not right or it’s not what you truly want.
- Regrets will only hold you back. Make a decision and run with it.
- Find something you’re passionate about and find a way to make money doing it for a living.
- Have a back up plan (but not for your love life – that has to be all in)
- Time by yourself is a good thing. Never feel that your worth is dependent on another human.
- If someone can make you cry or hurts you with their words or actions towards you, they do not deserve you. Simply walk away.
- Be yourself. Trying to be anyone else is completely exhausting.
- Don’t buy into the drama. Be dramatic, be passionate but don’t be the drama.
- Dream. Dream big and then go after them.
Maybe we all have something to learn from the little people. They know how to dream without the what ifs, without barriers and without fear. My little person has taught me more about life in 6 years than any university degree ever did or could (but I’m still thankful that I went and that I have the piece of paper that showed I worked my butt off for something I wanted)
One of my Mother’s Day gifts was a mug with the words ‘she believed she could so she did’. I think he hit the nail on the head with that one. I plan on doing so much more yet, just don’t ask me what, I’m still working on that bit. 😉
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