- This topic has 5 replies, 4 voices, and was last updated 9 years, 8 months ago by Hyo.
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January 6, 2014 at 4:12 pm #48540HyoParticipant
I am lucky enough to say that I have found work I am passionate about and motivated to go back to school to get my Masters in Occupational Therapy. All would seem well and done right? Unfortunately, going through this process I have found old negative tapes running through my head about pursuing my passion.
Before deciding on Occupational Therapy, I spent my undergraduate years preparing for a life in Public Health and even moved to a different state to study it at the Masters level. What I found out quickly was that preparing for a life in Public Health was filling me with dread each and every day. I am proud to say that I was able to leave the program and have the bravery to look for something that would be better….
But then a voice says “Why did you waste all that time and money preparing for Public Health? Now you have to take pre-requisite courses and take out more and more loans for your “dream”. You are behind, behind everyone else, behind your life plan, you are putting your life on hold and have failed. You will pay for your choice in crushing loans and watching everyone else sail by you”
When I sit down to study, I am at first fascinated by what I am learning about and excited, but after some time the anxiety of the fears of this voice come back and I continuously feel paralyzed by the regret of “wasted years” and the fear of “crushing debt and unsustainable living”.
I am asking for a compassionate audience here at TinyBuddha to help me review my story. Sometimes it is done better with a group you trust than just reviewing it alone 🙂
January 7, 2014 at 4:14 am #48584annetteParticipantHi Hyo
I can’t help you with all your questions but what I can tell you is that this year I am completing a four year degree and will finish two years after my 45th birthday.
For me it has been one of the hardest things I have done. It has been incredibly rewarding too and an amazing learning experience for many different reasons apart from the educational value. Most of my contemporaries are 20-25 and I am the oldest person on a course of about 80 students. Many people would look back at my career over the last 25 years and say my career path is “unconventional”. However, I can see a pattern as all of my previous work has involved advising or educating people on some level. I would not have taken the degree had I not been made redundant from my previous (unrelated) job because the skills I learnt in that job gave me the confidence to then apply for the degree. I am not even sure now whether I will use the degree directly in my next line of work but as a life experience the four years have been worthwhile and I still hope to earn enough to pay off the student fees.
Being a bit older and having a different educational background when you return to study will give you a completely different experience and different perspective than some of the other students. Sometimes this will help you and sometimes it might not but you have the maturity to be able to learn a lot about yourself from the experience. You will also find that you have obtained other skills and experiences in any previous jobs you have had and just through your life experiences which will help you in your studies in ways that you don’t expect. So just relax, enjoy the experience and rise to the challenge. Think of your studying as enhancing your life rather than just enhancing your employability. You are only behind because you think you should have followed a particular path and have deviated from that, but sometimes we learn more by going the long way round rather than the most direct route.
Good luck and I’m sure you will be fantasticJanuary 7, 2014 at 5:34 am #48585AikiBenParticipantHi Hyo,
I’m in a similar position to you right now. An important thing to realise is that the vast majority of people are actively dissatisfied or at best unfulfilled by the work they do. Although there have been countlees surveys verifying this, you only have to look at the faces on the train on the way to and from work to see very clear evidence of this. But most people either lack the awareness to even question the possibility of a more fulfilling career or are unwilling to sacrifice the money/time invested (seeing it as a waste) that got them to their current work or the comfort and security it provides.
Your life situation only seems behind relative to the western expectation of the way you should live your life, i.e. go to school, go to college, get a good jod, get married, have a family, etc. This is the program that most people have running in the back of their mind and if their own life doesn’t comply with it then they think something’s wrong. It helps keep them trapped in an unhappy way of life ans so blocks then from attaining fulfillment.
Everyone is looking for more fulfillment and happiness, all the above stuff doesn’t mean a thing without it. I know of plenty of people with enviable life situations (by appearance on the outside): high power jobs, great partner, family, etc, and they are miserable and/or their life is actually in a mess. It’s this delusion that there’s somewhere to GET. But it’s all one huge myth, there’s nowhere to get. I’ve read so many times that the only true fulfillment is inner fulfillment. For a long time I refused to believe it, but then I was (and still am) constantly reminded of the truth of it. Much of this inner fulfillment comes from just walking the path, i.e. the one where you march to your own drum, which you are doing!
If anything, you are ahead of most people because you are walking the true path OF happiness and fulfillment, rather than an illusory path TO happiness and fulfillment, and most people will do that their entire lives (and never get there, because there’s nowhere to get).
‘Unenlightened’ types would most likely say things like, “You can’t do that, you’d be wasting all that money, what was the point of doing your degree?” But they are missing the point completely! Life’s a journey, you change, you understand the world better as you mature, you see what’s actually important, and most of all you know yourself better. Like I said, a journey, you have to walk certain paths and have certain experiences in life, which have led you to where you are, it was all necessary, perhaps even essential to discovering what you do want to do (you are very lucky, many have no idea). Another thing, just as important as discovering what you do want to do is discovering what you don’t want to do, i.e. now you know that you don’t want to do public health, and if you hadn’t done it I’m guessing you wouldn’t have found Occupational Therapy.
The time and the money spent to get there doesn’t matter, it just seems important because that’s what everyone else is always trying to acquire more of. Don’t get caught up in this. The road YOU are on is a million times more valuable. It reminds me of the founder of the martial art of Aikido, Morihei Ueshiba, he tried his hand at a few completely different career areas, each time becoming quite successful in each area, but without hesitation dropping it once he realised it wasn’t meant for him. He certainly marched to his own drummer, and this was before the current ‘age of enlightenment’ where resources like this website make wisdom like this easily accessible to all. He created a number of bussineses and as soon as thay became successful he just handed them over to someone else and started a new project, because this is what he wanted to do, even though he could have stayed where he was and let the money pile up. Many would say (What are you doing?!!). He ultimaltely found what he was meant to do, which gave him great purpose, in training in, developing and teaching Aikido and achieved a level of mastery of both Aikido coupled with spiritual enlightenment that I doubt will ever be seen again.
Let your anxiety go, have faith!
Ben.
January 7, 2014 at 6:11 am #48588HyoParticipantHearing your words Ben and Annette brought forth that other inner voice that I had been neglecting so long because I was paying to much attention to my anxiety and to other people’s voices of anxiety. You are absolutely correct what you are saying. What I have been comparing myself so long too is that “go to college, get a high paying job, get married…” script which hasn’t fit me and I always knew wouldn’t but I kept as a marker of my worth because it was just expected of me and is easier to judge myself with than by looking inside and seeing my inherent worth and if my outer life was keeping in with my inner life.
All your words were so beautiful. Thank you both 🙂 It truly is amazing what a little compassion and understanding can do for a person.
February 14, 2014 at 5:25 am #50992Devi ClarkParticipantDear Hyo,
Everyone has those terrible inner voices. They try to keep us safe, but actually keep us small.
And what I know for sure (having coaches lots of career changers) is that the closer we get to our dream, the louder they scream.
So perhaps it is a good sign that you are hearing these voices?
How do you deal with them? Either say ‘thanks, but I am going to do this right now because I really care about it’ directly to the voice or get right back to your passion and re-connect with what is important to you. However loud the voice is, it can never compete with the things that you love.
Devi
April 28, 2015 at 11:36 am #75920HyoParticipantI am updating to let everyone know that I have been accepted to the #1 program of my choice. I purposely have chosen a much cheaper college to take control of one of my concerns about cost. Having implemented a plan of financial action, gotten accepted, and having put some time between this first post, I no longer feel afraid.
I also no longer feel paranoid about my financial future or society. I know I am in control. I made no bad decisions; I just made lessons.
Thank you all for your support.
PS: There was someone who re-posted my situation but they were not me. I believe they were a robot.
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