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BrendonParticipant
A lot of valuable advice has already been given. But I will have the courage to try as well. If you are so confused and uncertain don’t you want to try taking professional aptitude tests? These are surveys aimed at identifying your strengths, weaknesses, preferences, and personality traits. I know the tests are just generalized data, but they are accurate enough to reveal certain information that can help you with your choices.
BrendonParticipantI still remember and regret the mistakes I made at the beginning of my first job. It will not make you feel better to know this, but it may help you to accept that we all make mistakes. And these feelings of guilt and regret help us to get better if we interpret them correctly (otherwise they lead to self-destruction).If you have already apologized to the client for the mistake you made, the only thing to do next is to continue to live and work without making the same mistake again.May 6, 2021 at 11:11 am in reply to: I thought I knew what I wanted to do but now I am unsure #379266BrendonParticipantI think all people experience this. You grow up, you gain experience, and your priorities change.
I used to think I knew who I wanted to be and what I wanted to do. But when I got an education and went to work where I wanted to go, I realized that’s not my life’s purpose, and I have somewhere to grow. I mean, you can’t achieve something and then enjoy it your whole life. There are ups and downs in life, moments when everything loses its meaning, and moments when everything seems meaningful. The main thing is not to stand still. I know people who do nothing, sit at home and have no hobbies and no goals, and say they are not interested. They are closed to anything new. You can’t do that. You have to be constantly on the search. If you have now lost the meaning of what you were doing for a long time, it means that in its place another interest will come. The main thing is to stay open to possibilities.
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