
"Pause a moment to reflect on the words: The person you aim to reinvent is who you are today, not some younger versions of yourself. You must reinvent yourself for new personal/professional circumstances and how they fits into the larger picture of your life, now and for the future. What you learned in school, your personal history, and your professional experience got you to this point. Now you can consider new ways of learning and new things to experience."
"In Drucker's conception, reinvention should be bold and exciting. It probably entails something more than finding a new job, although that can be a component, especially in starting a new career. Reinvention requires introspection, creativity, curiosity, diligence, the desire for change, and the willingness to reach out to others for information, advice, and connections. Organizing for Reinvention Reinvention can be less daunting if it's approached in an organized way."
People change over long spans and develop different needs, abilities, and perspectives, creating a need to reinvent themselves. Reinvention should focus on who a person is today and adapt to new personal and professional circumstances within the larger life trajectory. Reinvention should be bold and exciting and often involves more than changing jobs. Effective reinvention requires introspection, creativity, curiosity, diligence, desire for change, and willingness to seek information, advice, and connections. Approaching reinvention in an organized way—contemplating, planning, and executing—makes it less daunting. Maintain an open mind, persistence, and patience.
Read at Psychology Today
Unable to calculate read time
Collection
[
|
...
]