When I Grow up...


One of my favorite commercials was an ad for Monster.com.

It showed fresh-faced kids looking into the camera and

sharing their dreams for the future. We're accustomed to

kids saying they want to be a doctor, or an astronaut, or a

ballerina, but instead these kids said, "When I grow up, I

want to be a brown nose," and "When I grow up, I want to be

in middle management" and "When I grow up, I want to be a

yes-man."

The kids are so cute and their answers are so absurd you

can't help but laugh. But looking at your own life, can

you still laugh? Or are you on the verge of crying,

because you are stuck in middle management, you have a

brown nose, and you are definitely a yes-man (or woman).

Kids have a distinct advantage over most adults: they are

free to dream. If a 10 year old says "I want to be a

doctor," everyone smiles and says "You can do it. You can

be anything you want to be." If a 40 year old mother of

three says "I want to be a doctor," most of the people

around her will likely say "Go back to school at your age?

Where will you find the money? Do you have any idea how

long that will take?" What's wrong with that picture?

Who put an age limit on dreams? When are you suppose to

stop pursuing your dreams and start "acting like an adult?"

Its sad that society's definition of acting like an adult

often means jumping into the mainstream, doing what

everyone else does and not rocking the boat. You get a

"good job," you bring in a steady pay check and you never

ever EVER do anything risky like start your own business or

quit the "good job" you hate, or go back to school to start

a new career.

I am particularly fond of a quote by Mark Twain. He says,

"Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the

things you didn't do than by the ones you did do. Sail

away from safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in our sails.

Explore. Dream. Discover."

Ask you inner child what he or she wants to be when they

grow up. I dare you.

About the Author

Myrtis Smith is the founder of Premeditated Life. At

Premeditated Life we have one focus - Your Career. As a

career coach I offer a variety of services designed to

improve your professional skills, support you in your

career transitions, and empower your job search.

For a FREE Career Assessment contact us at

coaching@premeditatedlife.com