I would like to share some insights of some readings of this week.
Reading "How Will You Measure Your Life?" by Clayton M.
Christensen, made me to ponder about the importance of enjoying the life and
the career. Sometimes I feel that the job never ends, and I want to have more
time for my family, then I try to do my best in my job to have more time for my
family or I try to work in home to spend more time with my family. Then, I am
working to improve spending quality time with my family. I provide the enough
for them and when I see them, I feel that the time spend in my job is worthy,
but this must to be balanced.
The reading of "The Start-up of You", made to think that
I am an entrepreneur, and that I have been an entrepreneur since many years
ago. I am in a way of learning, and I learned that I am an entrepreneur, inclusive
working as an employee.
Maybe an entrepreneur is someone that works in the own business
but I think that this goes beyond. In the career of an entrepreneur, there are
moments of learning. So, as an employee, the learning to become a trained
entrepreneur may be big.
I think that reading "The Start-up of You", I learned
about the importance of networks. I learned that isn't enough being the best,
is needed to have a good communication with the boss. Also, the formula "IWe",
summarized what I believe; I didn't have a formula to remember it or explain it
best in the past, but this formula explains it well. So, the skills and talents
of someone added to the talents of others, power the potential of the team.
Other important insight was that I must to do what I like to do and
what the market pays, but added to this and principally, it's needed to
recognize what is our mission in the life.
So, pondering what is my mission, I will understand why I am here,
and what can I do to do my best. I think that my best is spending quality time
for my family, to build a family forever.
Also, I learned that the right decisions make that I can spend the
time just working or with my family.
Lastly, I learned from the talk "Little Things Are Important"
that the future is built by the actions of today. In fact, each moment builds the
future. So, what I do every day makes what I will get or what will be in the
future done.
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