14 Mar 2008 02:22:53 | Susan Dunn, The EQ Coach
Do you think that’s true? You can EITHER have fun OR you can
make money, but not both?
I’m an EQ Coach. I help people increase their EQ, i.e., those
factors that make us happy and successful that don’t pertain to
cognition and IQ. Many of my clients don’t come to me
specifically for EQ coaching. Let’s just call it a “value-added
extra” in my coaching mix.
Emotional intelligence means self-awareness; being in touch with
your own feelings. Then managing your own emotions and those of
others and using your emotions to make good decisions. It
involves such competencies such as creativity, intuition,
flexibility, social skills, leadership ability.
I was reading an recently by Mark Henricks, called “Some People
Aren’t In It for the Money.”
(http://www.powerhomebiz.com/column/mark/forthemoney.htm ). He
talks about people who’ve already made their fortunes, but keep
on working. They turn around and are just as successful in the
new endeavors.
Mark writes: “According to Herbert E. Brown, executive director
of the Massey Center for Business & Innovation & Development at
Robert Morris University in Pittsburgh, ‘Research indicates that
for only one in 10 it’s about money anyway....That isn’t the
deep-seated motivation.’”
Most of my clients aren’t millionaires like the people in Mr.
Henricks’ article. They’re mostly regular people to whom you can
perhaps more readily relate. Most of them are midlife transition
folks who have explored what money can buy: beyond the point of
basic needs, not much. I have the advantage of talking daily
with people who are retiring, and creating the next stage of
their life. What do they know that we don’t know? (Names and
details changed for anonymity.)
· Tom is retiring from 30 years working for the government. He
tells me he hated the job, and now he wants to do something
meaningful and more challenging. He’s off on a grand adventure
of discovering his innate talents, and finding his passion. He
could care less how much money he makes this year.
· Betty has worked for about that same length of time in a
profession she also didn’t like, but it paid the bills. She
asked me if I thought she’d be crazy if she went back to school
fulltime, starting all over again ‘at her age’ in a field that
really appealed to her. “Crazy?” I said. No, I think you’re
going sane.”
· Edward did a ‘phoenix’ if you know that myth; a real crash and
burn. Trashed a business, went through a divorce and bankruptcy.
(Some people don’t go gracefully into transitions; they put
their backs to a wall.) Slowly he reconstructed his life,
focusing on things he liked to do. “When you’re doing something
you love,” he tells me, “it isn’t work so it doesn’t matter.”
Didn’t I read that somewhere?
· Alice took my Strengths course and said it brought tears to
her eyes. “I thought of a little lost child,” she wrote me. “How
far I’ve gotten away from myself. How much I long to find me
again.” She’s gone on a search.
· Marisa spent 20 years in a career her StrengthsFinder™ Profile
showed was an extremely poor choice. Her final year she suffered
from chronic back and neck pain, sciatic nerve problems,
hostility and migraine headaches. She finally got the message
her body was sending her. She spent 6 months working with me to
figure out what made her feel good, work wise, and has changed
fields. “Suddenly I’m making money,” she said, “and rather
effortlessly. I find this hard to believe.”
· When Nancy started coaching I asked her, “What would you like
to do?” “I have no idea,” she said. “No one’s ever asked me, and
I’ve never asked myself.” “Why?” I said. [pause] “Are you
supposed to like what you do?” she asked.
Interestingly enough, all of these clients have become
entrepreneurs. For each of them money v. something-I-love-to-do
was initially a conflict. Each of them has resolved this in a
different way, but each of them has shifted from “What will make
me the most money?” to “What would I really like to be doing?”
I do have younger clients, too.
Sam’s only been working 5 years and wanted coaching on how to
get organized. He loves his work. He’s never mentioned money. I
asked him at one point about vacations. He said, “I don’t think
about vacations. I’m new to my field.” That was sooo wonderful
to hear!
Evan started a dot.com and made a lot of money. A
hostile-takeover forced him out, but left him with a hearty
yearly stipend to leave his name on the letterhead. Evan hadn’t
even gone to college! What’s he doing now? He’s at Oxford,
soaking up the formal education he didn’t need to make a
fortune, but knew he needed for his soul.
Must you go for money, or go for pleasure? I don’t like any
either/or statement, do you? You can have both, you can have
neither, and you can also have a third option.
Most people are about as happy as they decide to be (Abraham
Lincoln), and most people have about as many options as they
decide to have. If you see it as a choice between the two, then
it will be. If you use your EQ, think outside the box, and
consider possibilities, then you can generate options and
solutions. If you think it has to be either/or, how has this
worked for you so far?
Martin Seligman, Ph.D., (http://www.authentichappiness.com)
thinks authentic happiness comes from knowing what your
signature strengths are, and being able to use them for a higher
purpose.
I think Martin Seligman, Ph.D., has a point there!
About Author :
©Susan Dunn, The EQ Coach™, licensed Accountability Coach™.
Emotional intelligence coaching, Internet courses, EQ
assessments, business EQ culture programs, products available
for licensing, training for EQ coaches. Improve every area of
your life. Results-oriented coaching. www.susandunn.cc,
mailto:sdunn@susandunn.cc for FREE ezine. Affiliates in UK,
Australia, Malaysia. Ofrece coaching personal y cursos de
Internet sobre inteligencia emotional (EQ). Se habla espanol.