Tips on choosing a career and jobs

Posted by Unknown on Saturday, November 3, 2012


"Everyone is doing essentially gambling when choosing a career or a job. He had risked his life for it. "
WHY SHOULD INTEREST?
One thing that is usually the most difficult young people who started looking for a job is to choose a field of work that suits them. Why should match? According to research by a number of psychologists in the United States known to choose the appropriate line of work was not only affect the financial condition alone, but also have a major impact on our mental and physical health.

Relationships with Health Works. "Many young children start life with a passion and dreams, finally arriving at the age of forty years in a state of frustration and even suffering from mental disorders," says Dale Carnegie, author of American popular psychology. "And this is not something that is surprising," he said, "if only you knew so much anxiety, regret, and frustration arising from wrong in choosing a job."
The reason? Because they are not happy with the job!

"Nothing is more pitiful," said Edna Carr, renowned career counselor who has interviewed thousands of workers for the DuPont Company, "than people who do not earn anything from his job unless his salary alone."

Similar disclosed Dr. William Meninger, renowned psychiatrist who has done research in the U.S. Army. He said, "We learned a lot in the military duty on the importance of the selection process and job placement. About the importance of putting the right people in the right positions. When someone feels misplaced, when a person feels under-appreciated as it should be, when someone believes their talents and abilities have been misused, then that's where we'll find 'victims of psychological warfare' really is. "

According to research conducted longevity in America by Dr. Raymond Pearl of Johns Hopkins University are known to work in suitable employment is an important factor that supports a person's longevity.

The reason? Because the people who work in jobs that match he will always be happy with his work. They will never experience anxiety, stress, regret, and disappointment that often triggers the onset of a variety of physical and emotional illness in a person. Various kinds of diseases which if left to grow and will shorten the life of a person.

Dr. A. A. Brill, another famous psychiatrist, says, "One hundred percent of office workers fatigue arising from psychological distress called emotional factors. Saturation, buried anger, feeling undervalued, feeling worthless, feeling pressed for time, anxiety is the emotional factors that make weary office workers. Making them susceptible to the flu, reduce performance, and make it back home with a headache. "

A similar opinion expressed Sue Browder, author of best-selling Eight Easy Ways to Look and Feel Years Younger. He said, "Stress arising from dissatisfaction at work can make you look tired and exhausted. This in turn can cause a number of diseases. Research conducted by the Northwestern Life Insurance a few years ago also found that half of the people who work in the field of work full of tension and stress often suffer from headaches, flu, gastrointestinal inflammation, bronchitis, and pneumonia. "

Douglas LaBier, Director of the Center for Adult Development, Washington DC, agrees with it. He said, "Often people feel back pain, headache, or stomach pain during weekdays. But when the weekend comes, the symptoms mysteriously disappeared and then came back on Monday morning. "

According to Deepak Chopra, author of Magical Body, Magical Mind, the majority of heart attacks occur in the United States on Monday at nine in the morning. The reason most often raised his victims was dissatisfaction in the workplace.

Researchers from the University of California, Los Angeles, also found people who had worked for ten years in the work environment full of tension and pressure would be five times more at risk for developing various types of cancer than those who enjoyed his work.

Sources: Books Tips Strategies for Jobs Wanted (Edwin Solahuddin, Publisher Escaeva, 2008)

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