When you set off to conquer your professional aspirations, you felt as if you could jump over your stepping stones two or three at a time. At some point in your life, you noticed the fire started to dim and your passion for your career waned. Should you change gears and get an entirely new career path altogether? Watch out for a few warning signs that you may be ready to switch gears just a few years into your career. Changing careers may seem like a scary proposition, but sometimes, you just have to take the plunge and go for it.
You Feel Your Career Has Nowhere to Go
You notice several things about your career to this point that seem to indicate you are stuck in a rut, and you keep spinning your metaphorical wheels without going anywhere. For example, you bounce from company to company every few years but you do not improve your amount of pay or job title. You also realize that people hired after you get a promotion ahead of you. This is the time to think about whether you just do not have the motivation to work harder within your chosen industry.
Learning Curve
As you evaluate your position, maybe you feel as if you are not learning anything anymore. When was the last time you took the time to learn something new about your industry? Have you taken the initiative to learn something new at work in the past six months? If you do not want to learn something new about your job or your career field, perhaps you should find a better career path while you can physically handle the process.
Physical Feelings
Gauge your physical feelings. Notice your energy level over several weeks, and examine whether you are exhausted, fatigued or physically ill all of the time. This may mean your body is telling you what you need to do. Even if you do not say you want a new career, your physical body may not let you continue. You might consider changing careers and getting a new job before your body makes it impossible to go to work and your mind follows.
Emotional Capital
Assess your emotional capital at work and at home. Do you feel stressed, anxious, short-tempered and snippy? Do your loved ones wonder why you are upset all the time? Perhaps your workplace is making your mind toxic and you simply need a break for your own sanity. Grab a new career before it costs you any close relationships.
Boredom
Your working relationships do not fulfill any needs in your professional life. The entire day at the office goes from one task to the next, and you feel as if you do the same thing over and over again. Even worse, you feel no excitement about your job duties at all, and you go through the same motions week after week. You could probably set your clock to the inane boredom you experience at the office. Get into a new career before your boredom and apathy consume your life.
The Pay Is Not Worth It
You earned a promotion, and you should feel happy about it. Instead, your apathy and annoyance come into play. Instead of being happy with your added responsibilities and better pay check, $200,000 per year plus stock bonuses simply does not make up for the aggravation, emptiness and risks that come with the job. Do you realize that you have priorities other than money? Maybe it is time to take stock of what is important in your career and make yourself happy.
Not the Right Fit
When you were younger and you started down your chosen career path, your goals, hopes and dreams were possibly different than they are now. There is nothing wrong with changing directions later in life as your outlook on your career changes with your personality. Everyone grows, and your career should grow with you.
One final thing to consider is that your career is not worth your life. If a combination of factors at work creates a situation where you need to choose your life over your job, choose your life every time. Hopefully your career never gets to that point, but you need to notice the warning signs before something bad happens from which you cannot recover. Recognize that changing careers is okay, and that it is just a life lesson for you to go through as you come out better for it once you find your fresh, new path.
Photo Courtesy of Muhhamed Haroon at Flickr.com
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