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Techfile: How To Get Over Your Fear Of Failing At A New Job - general
Author: admin | Posted In: general On 2018 | Views: 601 | Comment(s): 0
How to Get Over Your Fear of Failing at a New
Job
Walking into a new job can be scarier than a creepy
clown with a sack full of spiders.
You don’t know who to talk to. You don’t know who’s
got your back or who’s gunning for you. You don’t
know the way things are “normally done.” And you
don’t know how—or if—things will work out.
It’s this uncertainty that makes you second-guess
what you’re doing and doubt whether you’re good
enough to do a fantastic job. So yes, the fear of
failing in a new job is real.
Fortunately, though, it’s eminently fixable. Here’s how.
Remember Why They Hired You
You went through the interview process (which likely
wasn’t a cake walk), and you landed the job. But
now that you’ve got the job and you’re faced with
the reality of doing it, it’s easy to forget why you got
the job. So let me remind you.
You were hired because you’re the best. Your skills,
your experience, your strengths, your talents, and
your character make you the very best person to nail
this. The fact that your new employer selected you as
the best person for the job counts for something.
It means you’re as good as you sometimes hope you
are and better than you sometimes think you are.
Get Out of the Narrative
I’m going to screw this up. I can’t figure this out. I’m
not up to it. Everyone’s going to see me fail. It’s only
a matter of time before this blows up in my face.
Just a handful of the thoughts that might whiz
through your mind when you find yourself in a new
job.
My point is that your brain will manufacture thoughts
all day long. That’s its job. These thoughts and
narratives are just thought events, and no more
represent your truth than the thought.
When you gently notice the thoughts you have about
failing or screwing up, you have the opportunity to
see them as just thoughts, not reality. And that gives
you the opportunity to say “Oh hey, it’s you, thanks
for stopping by. You know what, though? I’m capable
of so much more, and I’m going to be just fine.”
Engage, Don’t Resist
Fear of failure drives you to do two things. First, it
makes you want to increase your odds of not
screwing up. So you work to ensure that what you
deliver will be what people expect. You work to
ensure the right boxes are ticked. And you work to
ensure your own safety as a priority.
Second, it makes you hold back—even just a little bit
—so that if things do go pear-shaped you can justify
it to yourself and devolve yourself of responsibility.
So you don’t voice your opinion in case it gets you
noticed. You resist going all in, because it’s safer to
keep things at arms length. And you build walls so
you know just how far you can safely go.
These things, by the way, are exactly what stifles
creativity and innovation, turns work into struggle,
and prevents you from doing truly great work. You’re
more likely to fail by resisting than you are by
engaging.
Know Failure Is Not the Enemy
Let’s get down to brass tacks. There’s no way of
knowing how things will turn out ahead of time, and
it’s entirely possible that you might screw up and
experience failure. So what? You’ve screwed up
before, and you’re still here. You’ve failed before, and
you learned from it. You’ve been there when the
brown stuff hit the fan, and you got through it.
Failure is just something that happens from time to
time, like a rain shower or indigestion, It’s no more an
indicator of how good you are, how capable you are,
or how valuable you are than a hole in your sock is
an indicator that you cant be trusted to wear clothes.
So perhaps failure isn’t what you should be fearing
after all. In fact, even scarier is not being willing to
fail in the first place.
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