I’ve often wondered if the
term “Peter Pan Syndrome” applies to me…
Marty Nemko Ph.D., defines Peter Pan Syndrome by these traits:
An unwillingness to get working or stay working when you're not motivated.
If you're only willing to work hard when you feel like it, you won't feel
like it often enough. Working hard must be something you do; it's not a
decision to make. It's foundational.
Dabbling: being unwilling to stay focused on becoming sufficiently expert at anything.
Brilliant people can achieve excellence in many areas but most people can't.
Networking
aversion. Not having taken the time to develop the deep connections with
the right people that, alas, often are needed to land and succeed at a good
job.
Betting on longshot dreams: becoming a self-supporting actor, artist,
documentary filmmaker, sports
marketer, environmental activist, fashion executive, etc. Yes, obviously, some
people have achieved such goals
but unless you are unusually talented and driven (ideally with great connections,)
your chances are small. Yet some people cling to their longshot dream,
sometimes as an excuse for not doing the work required to launch a more
realistic career.
Blaming your failure on something your parents,
spouse, or former employer did to you. Many people who were terribly
abused--including, for example, many survivors of the Holocaust or of Japanese
internment camps--did just fine. You've probably suffered a lot less. Unless
you suffer from a severe physiologically caused mental illness, you too can
probably triumph over your past.
Doing an insufficiently thorough job search. Here's what a thorough job search looks like:
identifying 50 people not advertising an on-target job but with the power to hire you
for your target job or create one for you, and you not only pitch yourself to
them but make the effort to build a relationship with them over months. You
must also regularly contact your extended personal network to get leads and
build the relationship, have a good LinkedIn profile, craft many
top-of-the-heap job applications, including collateral material such as a white
paper, a portfolio, and substantive follow-ups after job interviews, for
example, a mini business plan describing what you'd do if hired.
The takeaway
Might any of those Peter Pan Syndrome behaviors apply to you? If so, is it a
wake-up call? Or do you want to accept that you just don't care enough about
career success to make the now usually-required effort? Alas, today, more than
ever in my 30 years as a career counselor, I'm finding that unless you're lucky
or brilliant, landing and keeping a good job really does require you to be a
grown-up.
Most of these manifestations
have tended to apply to me over the past several years…
…To be continued…
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