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Passion at Work

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Passion at Work

How to Find Work You Love and Live the Time of Your Life

FT Prentice Hall,

15 min read
10 take-aways
Audio & text

What's inside?

Life's too short to be bored at work. Discover your passions and bring them to the office.

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Editorial Rating

5

Recommendation

Lawler Kang is here to help if you're feeling unhappy or unfulfilled in your career. His "Five Ps" self-examination process arises from his philosophy that, since "you don't get nine lives" like the fabled feline, you must live each moment to the fullest. Life is too short to stay in a boring job. You've probably heard these ideas before, but Kang's exercises and checklists may help you to act on them. His style is sincere, but overeager and jargon-ridden, and the peculiar, hard-to-read typeface exacerbates his confusing tendency to trip on his own clichés. getAbstract suggests that people who are feeling inextricably stuck in unsatisfying careers will find it worthwhile to transcend these drawbacks. Kang may be able to start you on a journey to fulfillment and happiness.

Summary

"Am I Having the Time of My Life, in the Time of My Life?"

Most people have dreams, but they never manage to make them a reality. They are "scratchers." Like chickens, they peck and scratch at the ground, hoping to dig up a few seeds, never looking up. They work a job to pay the bills and hope that one day, if they earn a lot of money and buy a lot of things, life will improve. However, studies show that once you've provided for your basic needs, accumulating additional money will not make you happier.

Scratchers try to control their lives – a worthy goal. Yet it is an impossible one, because of the "x-factor" – life's unexpected events, such as illnesses, natural disasters and even benign coincidences. You only go around once, so honestly assess your situation. Unfounded optimism or pessimism will only get in your way.

Don't confuse wealth or social status with personal success. Instead, write your own definitions. Think about the things that really matter to you. How do you want people to remember you when you die? Formulate a plan to live and work according to your passions. When you work at something you love, "work" ceases to be work. Instead, it becomes...

About the Authors

Lawler Kang survived a neural aneurysm and several major operations, obtained an M.B.A., and is now a business speaker and consultant. Mark Albion is the author of the bestseller, Making a Life, Making a Living.


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