Did You Stop Dreaming?
As a child, when asked what I wanted to do when I grew up, I felt that anything was possible. My response would make me draw on my imagination, would come
But with time, my answer reflected a new sense of maturity. In my teens I wanted to be a journalist or a lawyer; they were professions that showed that I had my head ‘switched on’ and that gave others the comfort that I had a successful future in my sights. It was a response that had little emotional response in me; I was, after all, prioritizing the probable over the possible. It made others smile all the same.
And so, over a few short years, I learned the skill of framing dreams and aspirations around some key parameters. They were rooted in reality, reflected my proven abilities and offered something to work toward, but were not so out of reach that I appeared delusional. I wholeheartedly accepted these new goals and the trajectory I had set, the only ruse was on me; thinking that these goals were far-reaching aspirations that would set me up for life.
I now know I was not alone. I regularly find myself among thirty and forty-something friends, clients and new connections that want more. Their professional trajectory left them at the fate of re-orgs and annual reviews. Rather than creating a success that set them apart, they fell foul to a vision that put them on the same path as everyone else. By not allowing themselves to dream, they restricted their own vision for who they might be, what they might achieve and the influence they might have on the world.
Now, as I approach forty, I look forward as if looking into space. Everything in my life that I have learned, seen and experienced was achieved in just forty years. I am slightly scared, a little apprehensive, but most of all, I am giddy at the thought of having enough time to rinse and repeat. Yes, it will be different; yes, there will be new challenges that lie ahead; that’s life. But doing it with the wisdom to know that what I can conceive, I can achieve is both liberating and fuelling.
We can’t plan exactly what journey our lives will take, and we can’t know what we don’t know. And so, as responsible adults, we often ground our vision of the future on the realities of our past, a practice that can lead to a blinkered view of what might otherwise be possible. But every day offers a new opportunity to stretch the expectations you have of yourself and start moving toward that vision. So if you think you may have missed out by not setting your goals far-reaching enough, think again. You have more than enough time to reimagine your future as you would dream it.
Bio
Ashana Crichton is an ICF Certified Leadership Coach and Founder of ARC Growth. Within her practice, she specializes in working with women entrepreneurs and mid-career professionals, helping them visualize success, realize goals and maximize their personal potential. Her coaching techniques give clients the clarity and insight to transition into new ways of working for a greater sense of purpose and sustainable work/life balance.
1:1 Coaching helps to increase self-awareness, build confidence and harness values-based behaviors for personal and professional fulfillment. Ashana inspires women to make their ‘what if’ their reality.
For corporate clients, she complements her Coaching with facilitated workshops and seminars for group/team development.
Name: Ashana Crichton
Title: Leadership Coach & Principal, ARC Growth
Website: www.arc-growth.com
Linked In: www.linkedin.com/in/ashana-crichton
email: [email protected]