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The lies, myths and half-truths ruining your career

Is it possible that there are basic myths and lies that are ruining your life,

holding back your career or justifying an unhappy or unfulfilled life?

The little things we believe or tell ourselves can go a long way toward

derailing our success, according to several LinkedIn Influencers, who weighed

in on the topic this week. Here s what two of them had to say.

Greg McKeown, author and Young Global Leader at World Economic Forum

Why do capable people fail to break through to the next level? It s a question

McKeown began pursuing an answer to when he quit law school 15 years ago. The

answer to the question, to my great surprise, is success, he wrote in his post

12 Myths that Lead to a Busy, Unfulfilling Life.

He first noticed the phenomenon when working with executives in successful

Silicon Valley companies. The success bred options and opportunities which

undermined the very focus that led to success in the first place. In other

words, I found that success can be a catalyst for failure, McKeown wrote. What

often happens, he contended, is that successful people get distracted by

trivial things.

If we re not careful, our lives become dictated by ideas which sound

convincing at some level but are really myths, he wrote. He pointed to 12 big

myths that can lead to a stressful, unsatisfying career and life.

Among them:

If everyone is doing it then I need to do it. Let the fear of missing out

consume you. Buy into the cultural bubble that glorifies being busy and

checking social media and email constantly. Don t pay attention to the quiet

voice telling you a different life is possible. Just go with the crowd, he

wrote. The truth, There is a joy in missing out. Discover it.

I ll stay up late and get it done. If you ever mention sleep to someone

remember to talk about how little you ve had lately. Boast about getting five

hours last night, or about how you pulled an all-nighter earlier this week. It

s okay to be tired and to admit it. But don t show weakness or worse, laziness

by suggesting you need a full eight hours, he wrote. The truth, he wrote,

Sleep is for high performers.

I have plenty of time left to get to that. Of course you aren t doing exactly

what you feel like should be doing, but there will be time to do what you want

to do after you re finished doing what you have to do. You ll get to it later.

It s a long life, he wrote. The truth: Life is pathetically short.

The overarching lesson is simple, McKeown wrote. When organising your life,

there are only two options: The disciplined pursuit of the essential or the

undisciplined pursuit of the nonessential, he wrote. And that matters because

if you don t prioritise your life, someone else will.

Theresa Sullivan, career coach at Wayfinder Advisors

Sometimes, we can be our own worst enemies, contended Sullivan in her post Five

Lies that Could be Ruining Your Career (and Your Life).

That voice we hear in our head recites some pretty interesting narratives so

often and so frequently that we really start believing them after a while, she

wrote. These turn into our beliefs about ourselves, others and the world in

general. They create our reality.

The trouble is, what we think in our own minds creates a reality that is also

just our own. There are as many different realities as there are human

beings, Sullivan wrote. That s good, because it means the reality we live in

isn t already fixed.

Then there are the lies people tell themselves that keep them in jobs and

careers and relationships that are bad for them, she wrote. It's often easier

to have a victim mentality that the cards have been dealt and whatever you've

ended up with is all you'll ever have, or that you really have no options left,

except terrible ones, and everybody knows it.

Why do we think this way? The stories we tell often start out as protection

for our ego; they make us feel better about bad situations, Sullivan wrote.

But then they spiral into excuses and beliefs that have the potential to ruin

us.

Sullivan offered the top five lies that professionals tell themselves. Among

them:

I haven t found my passion/I don t have a passion. Is that true? You cannot

think of one thing that you love doing or being? Is there something you do

better than most other people you know? If you had a free day all to yourself

to do whatever you wanted in the world, could you think of something you might

gravitate toward?, she wrote.

It s too late to change direction now How many years of life do you think you

have left? Now multiply that by 8,765, which is the number of hours in each

year. Is that really too little time for you to change direction?, she wrote.

Never put off a goal because it will take too long the time will pass

anyway. Might as well spend it working toward a goal that makes life fun.

I hate my job now, but I will be happy as soon as I [get the promotion/finish

the project/collect my bonus/get my degree]. Are you sure? This one thing is

all that is holding you back from happiness and liking your job? How long do

you think you'll stop hating your job after you accomplish this magical goal

that will make you happy? Happiness experts tell us it's pretty temporary.