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transition work life

Your body of work: the greatest gift for transition to a bright new life

February 22, 2018

Life isn’t about finding yourself. Life is about creating yourself.

George Bernard Shaw

Leaving an organisation where I have worked for over 30 years, I reflect on this transition and the gift of learning from my body of work over time.


body of work

Leaving a long-term job role

Today marks an auspicious day when I leave an organisation where I have worked for over 30 years. It’s not without sadness. And it’s been a strange conclusion in many ways. I’ve been on leave for some time caring for my mother who recently passed away after a long battle with terminal cancer. So not being in the workplace as I leave, the usual farewells have not been part of the process. It’s as if I have disappeared off into the sunset on another journey.

This is in part very true. I realised about two years ago that I no longer enjoyed my job or working in the organisation. The organisation had changed and so had I. It was time to get back to my long-harboured creative loves and pursuits that lingered in the margins of my days. The books and creative inspiration I craved and hung onto as I made a long commute to work by car and train became key. This liminal time became a passage of transition as I sowed the seeds of my leaving into the stitches and seams of my days. I realised my heart was no longer in it as I applied for jobs I didn’t really want.

In truth, this leaving had been a long time coming and at this stage, I had already started to move on and transition to another life. The one I really wanted to be living. You may know that feeling – your heart has left the building, or relationship or place. And you walk in the door each day feeling so empty dragging yourself through the day until it’s time to leave. So you make a plan to leave for good to create a new life.

transition

The greatest gift

My time in the organisation – a large government department focused on adult vocational education, TAFE NSW – was not without great joy and opportunity. The greatest gift of this transition has been to reflect on my body of work over time to plan a vision for a new life.

It’s so easy when we feel the sadness of moving on to devalue the past, all that we are and all that the organisation and its people have given us. The opportunities, the connections, the people, the learning, the vision, the strategy, the excitement – it can all get snowed over in a narrative of loss. There’s a tendency to risk losing the good and the valuable continuing threads with all of these feelings.

Pain is a player in this scenario too as we may feel undervalued. In my situation, I’ve been made ‘redundant’, my job ‘deleted’ in a restructure I am no longer a part of. The language itself is a challenge to deal with, not exactly creating the best of feelings. We can tie our self-image to this boatload of emotions and feel ourselves being towed behind it, awash with anger. In this, we can risk losing focus on the valuable gift of the resources of such timing.

But the greatest gift hidden in all of these experiences is what Pamela Slim calls our ‘body of work’ – the thread that ties our story together. This is the story we have been crafting and creating from our desires, our dreams, the opportunities, the interactions, the people we worked with, the projects envisaged, the products created and the services delivered. Therein lies the seeds of so much wisdom.

transition

Your body of work

It took a painful experience for me to realise all of this and to start to move on. A chance gut-wrenching workplace experience one day was the catalyst that made me realise I could no longer stay. I had to make changes. The next day I reached out to my friend, Victoria Smith, a life-coach and inspiration, someone who’s been down this road before me, to help me track a new path.

I’d reached a low point and I knew I could no longer navigate this time by myself. My coaching series with Victoria became the blueprint for a new life. A conversation about Pamela Slim’s ‘Body of Work’ in that coaching series was a pivotal piece that helped to tie my transition journey together.

The trick with a wise transition is to reflect on the driving force and heart of your work over time. What really drives you? Across all the job roles you have done, what are the recurring passions? What makes you come alive? Which themes occur in various ways again and again?

Pamela Slim says that her motivation in writing the book was to:

find a set of “new” skills for the world of work in the twenty-first century that would provide options, flexibility and freedom to workers across every mode, in every industry.

Her work enables us to do just that by identifying these core elements:

  • defining your roots
  • naming your ingredients
  • choosing your work mode
  • creating and innovating
  • surfing the fear
  • collaborating
  • knowing your definition of success
  • sharing your story

transition

My body of work in transition

As I’ve moved through this time of transition, I have worked through all these areas. You will see these themes woven through my blog posts, as I’ve shared my story along the way. I have realised that the key threads that tie my story together are:

  • making a difference (always a motivator for me, sharing skills and knowledge to help others);
  • teaching, coaching, mentoring, blogging (different forms of empowering others and sharing knowledge, skills and experience);
  • creativity (innovating, leading it, fostering it, writing);
  • leadership and self-leadership (leading others means leading yourself first);
  • being a reflective practitioner and knowing myself (a constant search for self-understanding, professional development and reflecting on experiences in work and other life roles);
  • writing (the authentic heart of it all, being a writer, becoming a teacher of writing and weaving it as a strategic and professional superpower in my life);
  • introversion and intuition as key strengths and gifts as an INTJ, the captains of my personality ship I needed to learn to work with; and,
  • in all of this, being wholehearted in how we live and work, not bringing parts of ourselves to the door of any workplace or relationship.

Bringing all this together in a new way into a new life and business is exciting but challenging work. It’s taken consistent work towards my vision sustained over time. And it is about hard work and not luck as Kerstin Pilz reminds us in this beautiful piece, ‘Why luck had nothing to do with my self-directed life.’

Making a path for my transition

So finding myself feeling half-hearted, experiencing a ‘loss of heart’ as Lynn Hanford-Day describes it, a kind of burnout, I shifted to a job-share arrangement 18 months ago to plan a new future. Coaching with Victoria helped me shape this new path and I knew the ingredients for the future, based on the key threads of my past and taking them forward.

I set my goals of:

  • becoming a Beautiful You Coaching Academy life coach (achieved July 2017)
  • becoming a certified Jung/Myers-Briggs personality type practitioner (achieved December 2016)
  • working with my Introverted Intuition preference as a key compass especially via tarot and oracle card tools (achieved via courses, personality work and ongoing practice in 2017)

Setting and achieving these goals has been the backbone of my transition journey, with key learning milestones stepping the way.

authentic heart

Core desired feelings as guides to transition

My core desired feelings are at the heart of everything I do. I want to feel and convey being:

creative, connected, flowing, intuitive, poetic.

Connection especially has been a theme now and finding new kinds of networks. Not being in a traditional workplace can mean a loss of connection. At a time of leaving the workplace, I’ve developed rich connections with a beautiful community of fellow life coaches. We support and inspire each other. I’ve also had the chance to develop deep connections with valued coaching clients who have honoured me through sharing their journey.

Via social media, especially Instagram, I have found the most amazing kindred creative souls. Through Quiet Writing, women have shared wholehearted stories of transition inspiring me and others as we reflect on and initiate change. The hallmarks are startlingly similar across the stories, though they play out in different ways. I am meeting more and more online friends in real life in the most incredible encounters where we share our stories. The personality type community is another tribe of people where I feel a strong connection and source of learning and growth. And I know I will reconnect in different ways over time with many special people from the workplace.

Creating your story

As we move through times of transition, we can create our story, as George Bernard Shaw reminds us. The special ingredients of our body of work, our drivers and passions, are the greatest gifts and teachers on the journey of change. Painful as it might be at times to feel redundant, rejected or no longer belonging to the team, it’s an opportunity to create ourselves anew.

This time can be an opportunity to interrogate what Steven Pressfield calls our ‘shadow careers’, where our lives are an imitation of the real thing we want. He suggests in ‘Turning Pro’:

If you’re dissatisfied with your current life, ask yourself what your current life is a metaphor for.

That metaphor will point you toward you true calling.

So now I move full steam into a new career focused on being a writer and a personality and life coach supporting women to create their wholehearted story at times of transition. I know the ingredients of my body of work. Writing, creativity, making a difference, coaching, teaching, reflecting, sharing knowledge, leadership, self-leadership, introversion and intuition are the threads taking my story forward in support of others.

Distilling all of this brings me to the focus of this transition and new phase of life:

choosing to journey deeper into your wholehearted story

This is the theme of my journey and body of work. And it is what I offer to you through my writing, this blog, my coaching and personality type work and my intuitive tarot work. My deepest threads weaving together into a new story to inspire yours.

Thank you for your support on this journey. May you find your true calling, bringing together all the elements of your body of work forward into a new life. I look forward to sharing my newly formed self-sustaining creative life with you in all its guises in support of your own.

If you’d like to find out how to work with me, you can find out more here. I’d love to work with you!

transition

Image of me by Lauren of Sol + Co

Thank you

With gratitude and love to my family and all my key influences, special friends, life coaches, teachers, coaching clients and fellow travellers on the journey this past year or so, especially my dear friend Victoria Smith.

Thanks to TAFE NSW and all my colleagues for our time together. It is a time I treasure and one from which the deepest friendships and connections have come. I’ve been blessed with inspiring leaders and mentors who have taught me so much about leadership and self-leadership.

Much love too to my beautiful mum, Shirley, who supported my journey transition generously and with the greatest enthusiasm even as her journey was coming to a close. This truly is the greatest of gifts for which I am forever grateful, her body of work being the deepest love of family.

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  • Jane Kelly February 22, 2018 at 2:14 pm

    Dear Terri,

    Thank you so much for your wonderfully honest and thought provoking writing today.

    I was thinking of you this morning as a lttle bird mentioned that today is your last day and I am so pleased to find this Quiet Writing piece. It is so beautiful it feels like a conversation from the heart as if we are sittng together with a cup of tea.

    The way you have expressed your transition and choosing today to share it with us is testament to how far you have come in your journey. Your prose reflects the hard work and structured process of reflection you have successfully undertaken and I so much admire how you have shared your experience as a way of shining a light for others of us. I know pain has been the catalyst, but as we have spoken about before sometimes this is important to allow us to focus on the important things in life. Your “body of work” is reflected in all you are doing in your life now and this is truly your time.

    Love and best wishes as your beautiful journey continues to unravel in new and surprising ways as a new sense of freedom comes today

    Jane

    • Terri February 23, 2018 at 10:42 am

      Thanks so much for your beautiful words Jane and I am so glad that my reflections are of value to you now. That is my intention – to share my journey and I hope that in this sharing, it can inspire others. It’s certainly not the easiest of journeys whatever form it takes but freedom and creativity are fabulous outcomes to strive for. Thanks for your support – I so loved working with you and I appreciate you supporting me at this threshold time and on the continuing journey. All best wishes to you too, Terri x

  • Caroline February 24, 2018 at 1:33 am

    Such a beautiful post, Terri! Wonderful insight and it leaves me so excited to see what you do next- I know the next period of your life will be amazing as you’ve prepared for it so beautifully. Also a great reminder that I’ve been wanting to read Body of Work but had let it fall off my queue. Thank you so much for bringing it back! ❤️❤️❤️

    • Terri February 24, 2018 at 7:31 pm

      Thank you Caroline – you have been a huge part of the journey too, inspiring me in the way you combine writing and coaching into a unique business. Thanks for the encouragement and support and I hope you enjoy ‘Body of Work’. I love that you have a reading queue! xo

  • leonadawson February 27, 2018 at 7:53 am

    Thank you for sharing your journey Terri. The grief, the nostalgia, the absolute joy of being part of an organisation and with people who made a REAL difference to the lives of many and the courage to realise it is time to move on (even within the context of the restructure). I, too, am traversing this territory with the same organisation starting with a Spill & Fill then being offered the same job in the new structure, a singularly Kafkaeske moment. I, too, have spent nearly 2 years transitioning – traversing what I call “the Great InBetween’. For a year I worked in other roles within the organisation trying to find my Mojo – she’s not there apparently. For 9 months I have taken extended leave.For 9 months I have had one foot still in TAFE and my other foot tapping around tentatively trying to find some other kind of stable ground. In March I will be compelled to make a choice – go back or leave. Go back to my ‘new’ job or resign. My heart breaks at leaving the people and work I have been defined myself by for 25 years. But the truth of the matter is that my heart is not in it in that new structure. My heart is not in it in this phase of my life. TAFE is moving on and so am I. I have been leaning into this new phase of my life ever so gently for 9 months and as I emotionally lift that back foot up and out of TAFE and put weight onto the foot stepping into The New another pathway and opportunities are forming around me. So thank you for sharing your story and the book Body of Work which I now eagerly await in my letterbox. I have no idea how I stumbled upon your site this morning of all mornings. Serendipity. Now following your journey with interest and hope 🙂

    • Terri February 28, 2018 at 9:12 am

      Oh Leona – thank you for sharing your thoughts. I feel your pain and I know we are not alone in feeling this deep sense of being torn and also of grief in what we might lose. But our heart is a guide we can trust and that feeling of our heart not being in it is a sign that we are yearning something better and different. I am so glad my words were helpful to you as a fellow traveller on this journey. I hope ‘Body of Work’ helps you too in shaping a new life from all that you have done and value. All that time invested can take us forward if we take some time to really understand the common threads. Then with this knowledge, make a new life. Thanks for connecting and following my journey as you work through your own. And all best wishes with it – may we inspire each other! Terri 🙂

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