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subject: Discover Your True Calling [print this page]


Your profession is not what brings home your paycheck. Your profession is what you were put on earth to do. With such passion and such intensity that it becomes spiritual in calling Virgil

I was invited to speak to the students at the Indian Institute of Management in Ahmedabad earlier this year as a part of its CEO on campus program. I thought long and hard about how to deliver the best value to these bright youngsters in a two-hour session.

First, I wanted to share with them my own experience: success is not about building a career, but about pursuing ones true calling. With the top global and Indian companies wooing them, it is easy for any IIM graduate to be lured by material trappings, and to confuse money or job titles with the true success of long-term personal and professional growth.

I came up with a simple tool that people can use to discover their true calling. Every person has a unique gift or talent thats his or her essence. Most of us spend a lifetime without discovering or acknowledging this essence. Our education system, which is based on the principles of mass production, does not allow our unique gifts or talents to flower. As a result, we half-heartedly pursue a job or a career that does not completely and totally engage us.

The first step is to discover our true gift. For some it may be music or dance. For others, it could be being a great friend or an empathetic listener. Someone else might be a great organizer. For me, it is seeing the big picture. Maybe you already know your unique talent. But most of us dont. One way to start is by asking friends and family to identify your unique talent.

The next step is to discover our platform to excel. Our unique talent may have many applications in the real world. For example, an empathetic listener could excel as a social worker. Or she may choose to be an HR person. Or opt to be a counselor. The choices are many. It is left to each persons imagination and preference. It is also likely to vary over ones lifetime. The key word here is to excel. The drive should be to deliver a meaningful contribution, not merely a mediocre performance.

The third step is to be clear about our own measures of success. Too often, we blindly follow someone elses measure of success and feel disappointed. The Industrial Era, with its drive for standardization and scale, reduced success to a single dimension money. The measures of success in the Connected Age, however, will be more diverse, based not only on money but also on the ability to create global communities around your specific interests and passions. Individual financial achievement will still be important, but true success will include two other measures community recognition and social contribution.

Our true calling falls at the intersection of these three facets. When we pursue our true calling, we align who we really are, how we express ourselves in the world, and our goals and aspirations. In Jean-Paul Sartres terms, our Being drives our Doing leading to our Having the success that we aspire for. As with martial arts, this alignment of body, mind and spirit leads helps us produce the highest impact with minimal effort or stress.

New Constructs is your resource to actively engage not only in discovering your own calling but also that of your organization, your country and your world. Stay tuned.

Discover Your True Calling

By: Sudhakar Ram




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