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One Response to “What are the Chickens in Your Life?”
You make a very good point – basically counting your blessings and doing your cost-benefit analysis with a clear head. One needs to do that cost-benefit analysis on a semi-regular basis regardless. Has the gradual creep of the job and one’s changing career and personal needs moved the balance out of the net positive column? It is even easier to adhere to the first law of motion and stay with a job long after it is no longer a match with aspirations, needs, and skills. Whether the analysis points to seeking new opportunities with the same employer or striking out in a new direction, it is also often the things we did not do that create the greatest regrets.
You make a very good point – basically counting your blessings and doing your cost-benefit analysis with a clear head. One needs to do that cost-benefit analysis on a semi-regular basis regardless. Has the gradual creep of the job and one’s changing career and personal needs moved the balance out of the net positive column? It is even easier to adhere to the first law of motion and stay with a job long after it is no longer a match with aspirations, needs, and skills. Whether the analysis points to seeking new opportunities with the same employer or striking out in a new direction, it is also often the things we did not do that create the greatest regrets.