A wake-up call is a resounding signal received that change is necessary in your life. Often we get this type of call when a crisis or deeply challenging situation has emerged.
Clients ask me, "What is crisis in our lives? How can we tell we're heading into crisis, versus simply going through a really bad patch?" What are the signs of "breakdown," as I tend to call it?
As defined in the Webster's dictionary, a "crisis" is:
· An emotionally significant event or radical change of status in a person's life (as in a midlife crisis)
· The decisive moment (as in a literary plot)
· The turning point for better or worse, as in an acute disease or fever
· A paroxysmal attack of pain, distress, or disordered function
· An unstable or crucial time or state of affairs in which a decisive change is impending; especially: one with the distinct possibility of a highly undesirable outcome (as in a financial crisis)
· A situation that has reached a critical phase (as in the environmental crisis)
Clearly, we're taking about a "no turning back" situation - a time in which a re-evaluation is called for. The definition of "crisis" used in my forthcoming book Breakdown, Breakthrough pertains to the occurrence of a deeply troubling, heart-wrenching, or grueling event or series of events that brings you to a recognition, finally and irrevocably, that change must occur now. Crisis pushes you to your knees, and stretches open your awareness that to repeat this experience (or this feeling, event, or situation) again in the same way would be close to intolerable.
A wake-up call in the professional arena means that you suddenly know beyond a shadow of a doubt that how you work, what you work on, who you work with or who you are when you work, and where you work -- these elements are causing damage to you, your life, your body, and your spirit. A wake-up call often seems to strike out of the blue, yet we rarely get to this point without some warning signs along the way. Crisis may look different for each person, but there is one unifying theme that defines it:
Crisis wakes up the individual who faces it. This wake-up call demands our attention, and often leads us to have a "breakdown" or compels us to "break down" once and for all what isn't working, and shed it. Crisis reveals that significant revision in life or work is required immediately.
If you've had any of the following thoughts or considered these actions in the past six months, you may be heading towards a wake-up call, and now is the time to hear it, and embrace what it's trying to tell you.
Have you ever:
- Called in sick just because you couldn't face what was on your plate that day?
- Flirted with sabotaging the work of your boss or colleague because s/he's been so awful to you?
- Allowed money and financial "benefits" to keep you in an abusive relationship at home or at work?
- Wondered to yourself "What the heck is the purpose or importance of what I do?"
- Snuck out of the office, or lied about why you are leaving, so that you could see your child's soccer game (or performance, concert, etc.)
- Realized that you can't remember the last time you did anything for yourself?
- Blamed yourself for "not fitting in" and feeling so alone in your current situation?
- Believed you might have a nervous breakdown just getting done what has to each day for work and for home?
- Fantasized frequently about another field(s) or area that would be very exciting to focus on?
- Sensed that you are missing important aspects of your family's life, and will never get them back?
- Thought to yourself, "I don't want to do this one more day."
If you've had any of the above experiences and thoughts, you're most likely heading for a major turning point in the road, and it's time to grab control of the wheel.
Is a wake up call on its way to you?
If so, embrace it. Change is good. Just take this opportunity to explore your needs and wants fully, and realize they are not to be ignored. Uncover some potential new directions that excite you. You don't have to know the "hows" right now. Just flesh out one area you'd deeply like to explore, then take a step to research it and test it out. The key is to sense how your energy feels when you consider and examine this new direction. If you feel good, then keep moving towards exploring it.
The first step on the path of aligning your life to your satisfaction is realizing that you're stuck only if you perceive yourself to be. It's never too late to reinvent yourself or your work (trust me!), and expand your skills and abilities to reach toward a new direction that represents a better fit.
After all, aren't you worth having a career and life you love? I know you are.
Kathy Caprino is an executive and life coach, researcher, author, and speaker specializing in helping midlife professionals gain empowerment to step up to their leadership and growth potential and self-mastery in life and work. She is the Founder of Coaching for Positive Change, and author of the forthcoming book Breakdown, Breakthrough: The Professional Woman's Guide to Claiming a Life of Passion, Power, and Purpose (Berrrett-Koehler, Fall 2008).
Kathy has developed and delivered to major corporations a unique and effective corporate seminar for professional women called Professional Women Reinvented: Keys to Thriving in Professional Life, about the 12 common crises professional women face today, and new approaches to overcoming these challenges. For more information, see www.kathycaprino.com or email kathy@kathycaprino.com.
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