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Senioritis and Life Transitions
From time immemorial, high school and college seniors have
been afflicted with a condition appropriately named, "Senioritis."
For several months in the spring, after making decisions
about life after high school, many seniors feel suspended
in time, waiting for graduation day and the chance to get
on with the next phase of their lives. We all recognize the
classic symptoms: apathy, distractibility, boredom, restlessness
and overall lack of motivation. These conditions are also
seen when adults are making career changes. Transitions create
some angst about moving toward the unknown.
Want to learn a bit more about actions that you can use to
ease your transitions?
1. Look Back
Feeling disengaged or disoriented during transitions is
common. Why? You're leaving the familiar and routine for
the unknown.
This is a great time for families to look back and celebrate
what you've accomplished and the fun you have had getting
there.
Acknowledge what you are leaving behind and how you feel
about it.
Recognize the strengths and skills you will need and already
possess that can support this transition.
2. The Zone of Uncertainty
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Simply understanding this is a stage we all experience
- the space in-between the old and the new circumstances.
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Take care of your health. Get sufficient sleep, eat healthy
and keep physically active
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Use a "time out" from school work or job-related
activities as a reward for being productive.
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Learn from others who have done this before.
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Build basic life skills such as balancing a checkbook,
paying bills, doing laundry, or cooking.
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Realize as you move forward that these transitions will
continue, and with time and preparation you will be ready
to start your new beginning.
3. Look Ahead
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Define your clear and compelling purpose, which will motivate
and energize you.
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Create a picture of the outcomes you want. Some people
write about it. Others talk about it. Some create visuals
like a collage to inspire them.
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Support helps when you are doing something new. Enlist
others who can encourage you to strive.
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Begin with the end in mind. Put together a step-by-step
plan and timeline for getting to your goal, using backwards
planning techniques
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Stop "getting ready" and act; doing something,
even if it is a small first step, creates momentum and energy.
For additional information on handling transitions more effectively,
two books by William Bridges are excellent resources. Transitions:
Making Sense of Life's Changes and the chapter titled
"Getting Ourselves from Here to There" in JobShift:
How to Prosper in a Workplace without Jobs.
© Copyright 2008, Career Vision. Article may be reprinted
with permission.
Direction.
Decisions. Satisfaction.
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