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How succesful are you in your career?

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How do I manage to share it with colleagues? It depends. In my previous job only 1 person knew that there happened something. I didn't trust other people so I didn't tell them. In my new job, some people know I have PTSD and have some problems at work because of PTSD. I trust my colleagues and they reacted well when I told them about the PTSD. It felt like it was necessary to tell them something about it because I have a client that acts in a way that triggers me a lot. My colleagues don't know what happened. I find it difficult to talk about it and once an organisation specialized in certain events like the one I experienced, posted on facebook that events like the one I experienced are that rare that you better don't talk about with children because you can make them afraid. Most of my colleagues have children and I don't want to make them afraid that something similar will happen to their children.
How do you manage working without support? I think support is always important, PTSD or not... But keep in mind that you can choose by your own to tell or not to tell about what happened to you and your PTSD. Only YOU can decide what to tell, when you tell it etc. As said, in my previous job only one colleague knew something. So, yes, in that case, I managed it without support. Sometimes I felt that there was too much stress to function. When possible I planned some days off in such a period of time. Plus, I only work parttime. FT isn't possible for me, that's too much.

And I combine working with therapy and meds when needed.
 
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And I work not part time but kind of freelance job. There are days when I'm super productive and the ones when I literally am not capable to think. And as for telling to colleagues or other people... I just dont know how to act because if to say just couple of words nobody will understand (people here are not aware much of mental health problems) but to explain more will be weird.((so they see me mostly when I'm "on my top",so they won't believe anyway
 
I don’t tell people I work with about trauma, PTSD etc, the suppprt systems I have in place professionally are for my working life - the work I do means I need strong, supportive relationships to cope with the demands of the job.

I have some friends who know what goes on for me personally and who are there if I need to talk and I have a therapist who really gets me. I too have says when I’m really on top of things and says when I struggle to think straight. Luckily my job allows me to flex my work a bit to accommodate how I’m feeling, but there are certainly times when I just need to get on with it. It’s hard, but so is managing any chronic health condition.
 
Anana,
I hope you find your footing. I think acknowledging this in your life is A HUGE STEP. I am in my 40s and I am very much under-achiever in terms of career success.
I went to university on scholarship and quit after 2 yrs.
Went to technical college - quit after 1 yrs
Went to another college - quit before graduation and short of two credits.
Did a lot of retail jobs with no prospects
At a collection officer job, I met a man and I was so friendly, I suppose that he gave me a govt job
I stayed there for few years and finally left due to stress and a manager who was bent of destroying me.
I called my old college after almost 5 yrs and asked them to give me those two credits since I am moving like 3000kms and needed my diploma
miraculously he did and I got my diploma
got more office jobs, thought f/t and perm and great benefits (I live in Canada), they were below my intelligence level
I always felt intrinsically I cannot do more but yet I can
keep changing jobs every two years because of boredom or just becoming aware of my lost potential - always after little glimpses out of dissociation (my template reaction to my childhood trauma)
finally landed a well paying job and great benefits and lived in penthouse and got a dog and travel all over the world but still carry that deep feeling of I am not good, I will never mount to anything. I have a job but how cares it is not up to my potential. Happy in independence but empty inside.
All these times, of course, I am in the sleeping cell of dissociation and have no idea...some of my siblings went to masters and PhDs and two three careers but have their own ways of also sabotaging whether by weight, other conditions, bad relationships, children issues (resulting from whatever)
Mine trauma impacted my career to a point of no return.

Then I met my husband while traveling and fell hard and it is hard to keep sleeping when one lives with another. I woke up quite suddenly. I quit my good job for a better one (or so I thought). I got fired short of 3 days before probation period. The new manager was bullying me for three months that I had unstoppable diarrhea (sorry) every single day...which is opposite of my usual coping skills ( usually constipated = retention issues).. All of sudden now I lived in pure fear everyday. When she fired me, I was so happy!!!!!!! OMG I was relieved.

I was unemployed for 6 months for the first time in my life...and here I was happy. I had no financial issues (I live solely on my husband's income) and my salary was for traveling and saving so did not impact on my life. I was free from jobs and for the first time thought what do I want to do if money was not an issue.

I decided to go back to school and become what I meant to do for all my life - helping others.
and I got a job with the govt for 6 months contract and after that ended, I got one year contract with another ministry and lost about $4 and hour but still it is full time (no benefit but I got sick days) and the good news I can pay for my school and the bad news, I took this job which is much lower than what I did before but I have no stress and I made peace I am starting from scratch again AT LEAST this time for the first time, I am in school, fully engaged and in full intensive therapy, to do what I meant to do. my new career is so invigorating and so inspiring and so intense but yet I am so happy and so jovial and so lucky to realize this at this time.
I lost all my benefits, vacation pay and extra cash but I am in so much better place now to make a conscious decision to do what I meant to do all my life.

Now in therapy, I am realizing how every decision I made in the past was more about OCD and trying to control my environment and to keep that internal safety I did not have than based on passion and living the life!

I am giving you this long winded response so you can see no matter where you have been, you or anyone here cannot predict the future and I truly hope you find your footing whatever that was and still is.

All the best. by asking this question, you are already waking up.
 
I was so successful that I was fired an hour after requesting to keep a disability related doctors appointment ..thats how successful I was :(
 
@Catty, sorry to hear that and I realize how it might hurt you proving the fact you had those worries before( ( and I even did not try to ask for a leave because of mental health problems because it is not a common thing here. There were two times when I couldn't go to work and referred to having physical problems. That's why now i guess for myself the only one solution is work on your own with your schedule but there are no stability then (
 
(Sorry for bad English)
Well, actually the problem is like this: after the end of long term abusive mar...
I have been retired for 5 years. I had a rather high stress job that paid rather well. I loved the work and the people I met working. Now I have realized that the job was what kept me going. It was my escape for the war games in my head. A medical emergency brought on retirement. In months of actually having not that as a cushion my mental condition went south quickly. Thank God for the V.A. Times are better. Find what you enjoy. It is not work regardless of what it is.
 
When I was in high school I held stressful internships that usually I was the first person in high school to ever hold an internship there. I was in lots of clubs and also did pet care for money and balanced everything pretty well on top of debilitating back pain. I think I had symptoms of PTSD for a long time but after my abusive relationship at 18 I sort of lost my ability to do anything with a power figure. I nail all my interviews, everything I’ve ever interviewed for I’ve gotten (I have a system of putting my truthful responses and framing them well, I’m a great storyteller) but I can’t be that person in the job. When I pulled out of college the first time I got a retail job and had such a bad reaction on my first shift that I didn’t finish it. My hypervigilance was ridiculous. Panic attack for almost 6 hours, vomiting for hours straight because of the anxiety. I got a job when I went back to college but had so many panic attacks from the boss being similar to my abusers that I couldn’t do it. Too much vomiting.

I was TERRIBLE at the job. I didn’t give two sh*ts about it. They claimed to help people by spreading a specific type of knowledge but were just a bunch of rich academics spending a ridiculous amount of money to jerk off other rich academics to get richer, it had nothing to do with helping people who actually needed it. AND they were charging tens of thousands of dollars to my university, and I saw all the other programs that were like it, and I understood why tuition was so high. I gave my two weeks notice and called in sick for a week. I think I watched Bojack Horseman on my computer for most of my shifts I was there anyway. My hypervigilance was so bad there too.

The only jobs I’ve kept longer than 3 months have been animal related or actually helped people, not (like my one internship) profited off of the chaos, violence and unrest in the world. I worked as a working student at an eventing farm for a few years before I was 15, it wasn’t official work but I got paid well and also got free lessons. I was anxious a lot but I just had to go up to a horse and would be fine. I interned on Capitol Hill and loved that too and was really good at it, I was only 17 and everyone thought I was much older. Although I’m at this time just done with politics, I felt like I actually helped people. Listening to them, making sure their voices were heard on the issues they found important (and the congresspeople actually do see the tally of issues at the end of the day), and man I really loved that internship.

I’ve been pet sitting since I was 5 years old. It’s what I do now. I absolutely love it. I’m my own boss, I can choose to not take jobs, and although I don’t live on my own yet I live comfortably, just bought my first car, and am saving a good amount of money towards school, travel, and expanding my business. I often beat myself up over not being traditionally successful in having internships or academic jobs but I make more an hour than my friends who’ve finished college and I have less hours (I work a max of 25 hours a week). I’m actually getting booked 3 months in advance right now and turning people down. I could probably hire someone easily but it’d make my accounting so much harder so I just keep my current self busy. I’m hoping to also get a certificate in dog training.

But I’m also really fortunate in having the privilege to be raised in a wealthy community where the clients paid well, and being able to tap that market thanks to all of my connections and word of mouth within these wealthy communities, and also knowing how to commmunicate with people in a professional setting in being my own boss because I’m the third generation of self employed business owners in my family (two generations of realtors). I do work hard to keep my business and have only lost one client in 16 years and I think it’s because my rates were too high for them because now they hire where I was at a few years ago, high school students. Everyone else has stayed even as I’ve raised my prices. I dunno, I feel like the job is easy but I have friends who could NOT do my job. I feel like I’m robbing people sometimes but I think about it and I would pay myself my rates for the care I give people’s animals. I would pay more actually.

I am drawn to clients and attract clients who care about their animals like I care about animals. I have taken on on dog who is neglected but mostly because I feel awful he doesn’t get enough love and if I’m able to give him belly rubs and long walks when he’s never gotten that in his life, even though it kills me to see how he’s treated, that’s as much as I can do to help him, make him happy for an hour a day for a week or so. I’m just doing what I love the best I possibly can and I’m so fortunate that it pays well. I’m hoping to apply that to other things as well. If I have someone or some animal to help, I have motivation to push past my symptoms and do my job well. There has to be a reason to do something to help someone or something.

I really ranted here lol
 
I always feel so mixed up about this.
I am very good at what I do - just had my 15 year anniversary with this company - and at what I did. I have 3 degrees. But I don't consider what I do as a "career." It is only a job to me. Something I do because I have to work and I have to pay the bills.
It isn't what I wanted to do when I was young. The reasons I didn't pursue what I loved are complicated, but they have to do with my trauma and the decades of ensuing depression.
I don't consider myself at all successful. More like a complete and utter failure.
 
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