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Arment - Dream year: make the leap from a job you hate to a life you love

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Arment Dream year: make the leap from a job you hate to a life you love
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Some people are content to help fulfill the dreams of their employers. But my guess is youre not one of them. You were born with a dream of your own. And this year, youre doing something about it. Somewhere along your road to adulthood, you pushed your dreams to the side. You had to pay bills. You feared taking a risk on yourself. And so you settled into an unfulfilling, perhaps even unpleasant career. If its any comfort, youre far from alone; 66 percent of Americans hate their jobs. But what if someone could guide you, step-by-step, as you identify, plan, and launch your dream careerin just one year. Thats what Ben Arment does in his transformative coaching class, which has helped hundreds of people reinvent their lives to enjoy greater enthusiasm and fulfillment while also making a living. Now hes sharing his best insights, advice, and inspiring true stories in Dream Year. Youll find out how people just like you are discovering (or rediscovering) what they were truly born to do, then following a proven process to make it real. And youll meet men and women such as ... Chuck Templeton, who created an online reservation system, OpenTable, that now serves more than thirty thousand restaurants worldwide. Katie Strandlund, who launched her own event-planning business and developed a full and deeply gratifying client list. Fabien Riggall, who combined his love for film and theater into a unique experience called Secret Cinema, which has reached 120,000 people. Hilary Barnett, who started a social media company that now employs several team members and creates content for national brands. Theres no dream too big to be beyond the power of the Dream Year process. But before you conclude that this all sounds terrifyingly risky, consider Arments wise words: Worst-case scenarios rarely happen. And even when they do, theyre not as bad as we think. In fact, what most of us call a worst-case scenario is often just a reduction in our standard of living. If it becomes as bad as youd feared, you can always get another job. You can recover your life savings. You can get your dignity back. But you can never recover what you never tried at all.

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PORTFOLIO / PENGUIN

Published by the Penguin Group

Penguin Group (USA) LLC

375 Hudson Street

New York, New York 10014

Dream year make the leap from a job you hate to a life you love - image 3

USA | Canada | UK | Ireland | Australia | New Zealand | India | South Africa | China

penguin.com

A Penguin Random House Company

First published by Portfolio / Penguin, a member of Penguin Group (USA) LLC, 2014

Copyright 2014 by Benjamin Arment

Penguin supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part of it in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin to continue to publish books for every reader.

eBook ISBN 978-0-698-16040-8

While the author has made every effort to provide accurate telephone numbers and Internet addresses at the time of publication, neither the publisher nor the author assumes any responsibility for errors, or for changes that occur after publication. Further, the publisher does not have any control over and does not assume any responsibility for author or third-party Web sites or their content.

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To Ainsley

CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION

Never let the odds keep you from pursuing what you know in your heart you were meant to do.


SATCHEL PAIGE

You Were Born for This

After this year, I want everyone to look at your life and say, Ahhh, but of course. I want them to hear the faint sound of a proverbial click as your experience, gifts, passions, and platform all converge into one beautiful endeavor.

When this happenswhen you are finally doing what you were born to doit wont feel like work. Dont get me wrongthere will be sweat on your brow; youll be overwhelmed at times; and there will be moments when you feel like giving up. But it will be welcomed hardship.

There are two kinds of work. The first kind contributes to someone elses vision and gain. Most people are doing this kind of work, which is why country music songs about five oclock whistles and happy hour are so popular. This kind of work comes with intolerable bosses, slow-moving time clocks, and closely scrutinized paychecks to make sure the bookkeeper got it right.

The second kind of work contributes to your own lifes purpose. Sure its difficult, but the reason behind it makes it easier to get out of bed in the morning. You dont tell anyone this, but youd do it for free. Its the occupational equivalent of a runners high where youve broken through the side cramps and short-windedness, and now youre beaming as the landscape moves rapidly past you.

Some people are content to do the first kind of work and help fulfill the dreams of their employers. But my guess is youre not one of them. You were born with a dream of your own. And this year, youre doing something about it.

By reading this book, you are moving toward a new kind of work. This year, we are going to discover a viable, profitable, and sustainable idea model that brings your dream to life.

This is your dream year.

DARING TO DREAM

A ship in harbor is safe, but that is not what ships are built for.


JOHN A. SHEDD

Frustration Shapes a Dream

As you enter this next year, Im counting on one thing from youthat youre frustrated. If you were to say, No, Im doing great. Everythings fine. I just want to try out this new idea, Id be worried. If you werent discontented, heartsick, or angry about something in the world, you would have no reason to go after your dream.

Without frustration, youd never even recognize your dream, let alone have the courage to pursue it. Going after a dream is hard. And frustration is the fuel that propels you through the challenges when your idealism runs out. There are going to be times when youll need that frustration. Youll need a worse time to help you get through the difficult times ahead. Frustration is the grit that motivates you to pursue your vision. It makes you unwilling to go back to the way things were before you decided to act.

When people get frustrated, most of them respond by complaining. And you cant blame them. Bad bosses, no money, workplace injustices, terrible customer service, the lack of an affordable optionweve all been there.

But we can also respond to frustration by dreaming. We can take the same agonizing circumstances and use them to create a fresh, new vision for the future. To do this, you and I must learn to see frustration as a gift.

After all, frustration shapes a dream.

There is something missing, something lacking, or something unjust happening in the world, and the only one who seems to notice it is you. But thats how its supposed to work. You notice a problem that no one else is addressing, and it eats at you until youre finally willing to do something about it.

Who knew frustration could be a good thing?

In 2010, Ben Nockels of Oklahoma City experienced a frustration that he could not shake. He learned that there are 408,000 children in the foster care system in the United States. He also learned that out of this population of abandoned kids, more than 107,000 are adoptable. In other words, their parents rights have been terminated or relinquished. In Bens words, these kids are never going home. They have no sense of place, no sense of belonging, and are not part of any family.

For the kids who are not placed in foster homes, there is only one outcometheyll remain in the system and languish until they age out at eighteen. And history shows that those who age out of the system dont fare well in society. Theyll face incarceration, addiction, joblessness, and even premature death.

Overwhelmed by this frustration, Ben joined my Dream Year coaching program to figure out a solution. He started with his home state of Oklahoma. As of January 1, 2012, there were 8,308 children who were in the custody of the state. Ben met with the leaders of the Oklahoma Department of Human Services and learned that 1,500 additional families were needed to place kids in homes. Ben believed the best place to find those families was the faith community.

So Ben launched the 111 Project, which mobilizes congregations to place foster kids in the homes of loving families. The 111 stands for one church, one family, and one purpose. Ben figured out that there are 6,100 churches in the state of Oklahoma. So if every church committed one family for one purpose, they would leave no Oklahoma child without a home. This was Bens dream.

So far, hundreds of families have joined Bens effort.

Make History

When youre frustrated, you can choose to complain about it, run from it, or ignore it. But if you decide to do something about it, youll make history. This is the gift your dream brings to the world.

What great dream is frustration birthing in you?

were both alive, they shared an unlikely friendship. Although their dance styles were completely different and their musical tastes worlds apart, they shared a strong connection out of the public eye. When a reporter asked Fred Astaire about their unusual relationship, he surprised everyone by admitting that they both danced out of anger.

Now, we have reason to believe that Michael Jackson did. His dance style was aggressive, and he often decried the loss of his childhood. But who would have guessed that the graceful and elegant Fred Astaire was motivated by anger? It was a deep-seated, well-hidden motivation, but what a gift it turned out to be.

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