2018-09-11

2018-09-11 Tuesday - Ideas to Reignite Passion in Your Work, Career, Field of Endeavor

1) Envision: Write a bit of fiction - imagine where you want to be, what you want to be doing - [x] months or years in the future. Then prepare the outline of steps, actions, investments you will need to execute - and the relationships, skills, experience, and knowledge you will need to acquire. Then, as Zig Ziglar once said: "Plan your work, work your plan".

2) Expand: Attend meet-ups in your area (or form one, if one doesn't exist) on topics of interest relevant to your field.

3) Bridge: Offer to help a non-profit - in ways that will leverage the skills you want to acquire or hone.

4) Explore: Make a list of the people you respect and admire in your field - then reach out and ask them if you can interview them for a profile article you wish to submit to a news site, or professional journal, related to your industry. Probe for what drives them, Ask 'why' questions.

5) Speculate: Find a struggling start-up that you think is worthy - and offer to provide some of your time and expertise (ideally in exchange for some form of an equity stake - but if not, then offer on a Pro Bono basis).

6) Plant Seeds: Connect with educators and guidance counselors in your local high schools and community colleges - offering to give talks on your field/profession, as a career choice.

7) Fertilize Your Mind: Read inspiring biographies of inventors, builders, creators, makers.

8) Change your Latitude: For me, it took a month of sailing along Baja Mexico - and it was like a light was switched "on" again.

9) Change your Attitude: Get your blood flowing on a regular basis with some kind of exercise. Even better, couple that with learning a new physical skill.

10) Change your Altitude: Get up into the mountains - see the valleys and views from a different perspective. It will open your senses - and open your mind.

11) Write for Yourself: Write a journal, with one clear intention: In what way have I expanded my knowledge/expertise today?

12) Write for Others: Submit ideas for articles, on speculation, to professional journals or industry news sites - topics that would be interesting to explore/learn - and when accepted, you'll be forced to dive into the material.

13) Exercise Your Idea Muscle: If you feel stuck, stagnant, powerless - it probably has more to do with your attitude - than lack of opportunity - than you might think. Invest an hour a day to practice writing business cases for new business ideas (or changes/improvements to your existing company) that you would implement - if you had the budget, time, and resources. Submit those you connect strongly with to your management team (or, consider as the basis for launching your own company).

14) Reflect: Consciously set aside time to reflect and explore how each part of the work that you do goes into the assembly of the whole - and how what you do affects the final product or service, who it affects, how it affects them, and the value that you add and create. Consider how what you do can be done better, faster, more efficiently, at lower cost. Practice #Mindfulness

15) Network with Intent, Outward. Find ways to continually expand your network of professional connections - related to your field. Seek ways to introduce, connect, help others - and don't worry if/when there might be some pay-off. Practice #Selflessness

16) Network with Intent, Within: Organize a weekly lunchtime brown bag session with your company - seeking to invite people from different divisions, departments, groups - with a rotating responsibility for picking a topic for discussion. Use this time to focus on how such a diverse group can generate a sustained synergy for the creation of new ideas to remove roadblocks to the development of new products/services - eliminate bureaucracy and waste - streamline operations - and reduce costs.

17) Apply Shu-Ha-Ri: Return to the source - immerse yourself in the study of the basics and fundamentals of your field, detach from your assumptions of how things must be - breaking from tradition, seek to transcend by evolving new ideas that escape from the staid boundaries of what has been.

18) Transpose Your Frame of Reference with New Coordinates: If you feel you have been in a particular industry for too long - spending time seeding new problems/ideas may be just the ticket to re-ignite your passion. Try allocating some time to reading recent research papers in completely different fields to expose your mind to different contexts. This is my favorite site for such inspiration: https://arxiv.org/

19) Play: Give yourself permission to explore useless things - just for fun. in "Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman!", Richard P. Feynman tells of reaching a point of burnout - and how he recovered his zest for his work:
Then I had another thought: Physics disgusts me a little bit now, but I used to enjoy doing physics. Why did I enjoy it? I used to play with it. I used to do whatever I felt like doing — it didn’t have to do with whether it was important for the development of nuclear physics, but whether it was interesting and amusing for me to play with. …
So I got this new attitude. Now that I am burned out and I’ll never accomplish anything, I’ve got this nice position at the university teaching classes which I rather enjoy, and just like I read the Arabian Nights for pleasure, I’m going to play with physics, whenever I want to, without worrying about any importance whatsoever.
Within a week I was in the cafeteria and some guy, fooling around, throws a plate in the air. As the plate went up in the air I saw it wobble, and I noticed the red medallion of Cornell on the plate going around. It was pretty obvious to me that the medallion went around faster than the wobbling. …
I went on to work out equations of wobbles. Then I thought about how electron orbits start to move in relativity. Then there’s the Dirac Equation in electrodynamics. And then quantum electrodynamics. And before I knew it (it was a very short time) I was “playing’’ — working, really — with the same old problem that I loved so much, that I had stopped working on when I went to Los Alamos: my thesis-type problems; all those old-fashioned, wonderful things.
It was effortless. It was easy to play with these things. It was like uncorking a bottle: Everything flowed out effortlessly. I almost tried to resist it! There was no importance to what I was doing, but ultimately there was. The diagrams and the whole business that I got the Nobel Prize for came from that piddling around with the wobbling plate.  

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