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B Sch vs Life- Or, Learning to Say No
Recently I've seen a lot of threads on CD asking about extremely important life-decisions. Should they go to business school or stay with the love of their life? Should they focus on marriage, or on getting an MBA? These people ask for opinions, others chime in, and at the end of the day... well, who knows what happens. A person's gotta decide for him or herself, no?
Here's how you decide. You need to learn how to say no... To yourself.
Most people take the following approach. First, ask a question. What are my priorities? Family? (yes). Career? (yes), and so on. Then they say, let me advance each of those goals. Family- find the right guy... Career- think about the right job, apply to business school... Finally, they execute. They go on all those fronts, advancing each of their important life goals all at the same time. Yes, yes, yes. Onward, to improvement and happiness!
This works great, until some of those goals clash. What then?
When this happens, your approach must change. You need to say... no. For example, in business school, you can't go around taking every single job that is available. Previously, you might have the luxury to look and consider every option that is presented to you. But here, when the options are so numerous? You need to say no. Sounds easy, right?
Um... No. No is perhaps the most difficult word to say. Few people can say no to themselves. For instance, after a failed interview, many people tell themselves: "that interviewer just didn't like me... ANY other interviewer, I would have gotten the job." What this is really saying is this: "yes. I'm too good for this job. I could always do this job anytime. And I want to do it. It's someone else, someone silly, who is forcing me to say no."
Instead, few people tell themselves, "well, I tried my best. And, no, I am not suitable for this job. I am not good enough for it, someone else is better. I'm not perfect. No. Give up. Move on."
I've noticed that "no" is particularly hard for a previously successful, driven, and confident professional to say to him or herself. Such individuals (many of whom apply to business school) have built a successful career out of never saying no. And so it's no surprise they can't say no now.
So, for all of those people thinking about what to do... Business school vs marriage. Career vs family. Here's my advice: learn to say no. Tell yourself, (for example) NO, you're just not good enough to succeed in business school, but YES, that will allow you to go and chase your real dream of building a family.
This, BTW, is why schools often ask about what you've learnt from a failure. It's often only when you learn AND ADMIT what you're a failure at (ie, say NO to yourself), that you can then turn to focus on what you can, and want, to succeed in. Embrace the fact that you (and everyone else) is a failure, and you might start to find the answers to your own questions. |
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