I'll be traveling and taking some vacation time through November
15th, so Purposed worKING will be revisiting some earlier posts until
then...
Part and parcel to working is the concern and thinking about our future
and our career plan. It's a funny thing that we feel like with our work
that we have to be thinking not only about our current job, but also
about the next one and the one after that and that we get advice to be
planning our career at all times. What can happen though is that we
become so caught up in the thinking about the distant future that we
lose the perspective of the job we are in and being sure that we do the
current job well and get the most from the experience, etc. We are not
good at living in the moment and being very objective about our current
jobs as ones that we can enjoy and from which we can gain great
satisfaction. I have a friend who is never in the moment in his job. He
is always thinking and talking about the next job and what he can do to
further his career and he has little to no regard for the ramifications
of him always focusing on the distant future. He can't see that he is
not giving his all to the company where he now works, is not investing
in the people around him like they need and want him to do, and drives
his friends and his family a bit crazy with not settling down. I am not
sure what it is that drives this distant future focus versus living and
working in the present, but he is not alone in this. Many people are
like this.
As I was reading the book of Ezekiel, God gives Ezekiel many
instructions on what to tell the different countries and leaders about
what is going to happen to them in the distant future. This is where the
words "distant future" struck me as we cannot ignore what is coming and
we must plan and be cognizant of the future, but we can't obsess on it
either and miss the life that we have been put here to live. Being
present for those around us and being okay in the job we are in today
can yield many benefits and positives. Today, as you go through your
day, think about how much time you are spending truly in the present and
getting the most from it, versus worrying and obsessing about the
distant future. It may well be that today, if focused on, could be of
such value and worth that it blocks out all concern of the distant
future.
Reference: Ezekiel
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