Choosing a Career that Suits You!
Choosing a career for your life is a hard decision to make. In fact, other than choosing who you want to spend the rest of your life with, choosing a career, is one of the most difficult choices you will ever make in your life. What’s more, once you choose your major in college, it’s almost as if you have chosen your life’s course and this can cause young college students to feel somewhat uncomfortable. Career choices should be a renewed sense of excitement rather than one of dread but instead, college students declare an undecided major and start down a path of self-empowerment only they don’t really know where the path is leading until they try one or two majors and ultimately decide on the one that they will make their designated major until the end of their college career. Once a major has been declared in college, then students feel a sense of relief and dread all at the same time. After all, it’s now time to get serious about things. Choosing a career could be much easier if parents would start planning early with their children what their goals are and help the college bound student realize how to achieve those goals. It wouldn’t be a bad idea to also implement some strong books which have been proven over time to change the lives of the people who read them. How to Win Friends and Influence People by Dale Carnegie as well as Norman Vincent Peale’s book The Power of Positive Thinking are two options that you should encourage your college bound child to read. There are many other books which can engage a reader to really think about what they are doing with their lives and anything written by the author Dr.Wayne Dyer can be a good read for college students. While the books mentioned above aren’t necessarily going to help the individual choose their careers, it is highly likely that after reading the above recommendations that readers will choose to engage in true soul searching and some of the books recommended do offer sound advice on things which need to be within the realm of soul searching. Choosing a career definitely requires some intense thought. It requires knowing what you like to do and what you want to do and being able to find the resources to go after it. People who find themselves happy in their careers also find that they are doing what they love to do. What do you like to do? What’s your passion? What is something you could do every day for the rest of your life and be content? Have college students planning for career options find what it is within their own desires that they want to do. Once they recognize it, they will have the foundation of their career if they can place the elements they enjoy most into an income-producing career.
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