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Career failure....

30 replies

ellsbellls · 06/11/2020 10:02

Looking for some advice to help me come to terms with the increasing sense I have of having under-achieved in my career, or else do something about it. I should say up front that I know that many people have far more important things to worry about at the moment so please don’t flame me for even mentioning this concern.

I am early 40s, public sector. Began my career 20 or so years ago (eek!) and progressed quickly up the career ladder to the top of middle management. I was on a graduate programme and was seen as someone who would rise through the ranks quickly. Not boasting I hope, just setting the scene. But… I have ground to a halt. I haven’t even attempted promotion for 13 years despite various managers during those years telling me to consider it. I am now coasting, moving from job to job every few years. If I am honest, I am lazy, I can do the projects I am given without being particularly challenged. I always receive good performance reviews although I suspect I am increasingly viewed as a ‘coaster’ (perhaps paranoia?).

In the 13 years since I was last promoted, I have of course had children (now 9 and 6) and have moved from full to part-time. I now work 3 days per week. During the early years of child rearing it would have been impossible for me to even consider a promotion but I always thought that I would do it once the kids were in full-time school, which they have obviously now been for some time. A promotion would mean a great deal more responsibility. I have seen people try to do it part-time (4 days, never 3) and while it works for a while, invariably they end up working on their supposed day off albeit just to keep on top of sign-offs and clearances. There is almost no flexibility over the types of roles at that level.

I enjoy my days off. I go to the gym, catch up with friends, cook, read, keep on top of the housework and life admin. My husband also works part-time and we have a really good balance. He is the higher earner. We don’t need the extra money that a promotion for me would bring (again, please, not boasting, just trying to give some context). So, why, do I feel so frustrated? I should be content to enjoy my very comfortable life but I just feel like a failure, like I’ve not achieved my potential. Perhaps it is a mid-life crisis… The truth is that I don’t want to do a job at the next level. I just want to prove to myself and others that I could do it if I wanted to. I almost want to get it and then turn it down. I haven’t tried to do this as I don’t want to waste people’s time and I am not entirely convinced that I would turn it down, if indeed I got it. I have started thinking that maybe I need something else in my life, a different challenge. I’ve thought (at the very vaguest level) of doing a PhD, of changing careers entirely but life is so comfortable and I guess I am scared and perhaps a bit too lazy to actually do anything to change it but it nags at my ego and self-esteem which I guess is at the heart of this.

Anyway, I am not sure what the answer is but grateful for any thoughts.

OP posts:
squashyhat · 06/11/2020 17:51

I hear you. I spent most of my working life in the public sector, with a degree and masters, but never rose above middle management. I didn't want the shit that would come with more responsibility, and had a gruelling commute and chronic health issues so used these to justify lack of ambition. I took redundancy/early retirement at 58 on a good pension. I do wonder what I might have achieved but on the whole I'm not sorry I did what I did.

Littlepiggiesinblankets · 06/11/2020 17:52

This is very like me in that I progressed quickly very young but I definitely don't want to move to the next level up (although that's partly because I have enough stress in my current job) and I am far from retirement.

I have balanced it with signing up to long races for running and cycling (I am not athletic and I need to invest a lot of time and energy in training), competing in my preferred sport (riding) and signing up to do an OU certificate in IT (not my field at all). The more I have going on outside work, the better I am in work. I consider myself to be quite lazy, but once I've got some kind of public accountability to one of my goals (not meeting the cut-off time in a race, getting a terrible dressage score, not getting a good mark for an assignment).

It sounds like you might also be being influenced by others' expectations and view of you. You know it is absolutely fine to have a job you find easy and not to go for promotion!

You don't have inattentive ADHD by any chance, do you? (I do hence why I'm asking.)

minipie · 06/11/2020 17:56

It sounds like you, like many of us, have mixed up “career success” with “life success”. The key is to change your mindset to give the other bits of your life equal importance.

It sounds to me like you have a very successful life overall. You exercise, have a social life, see your kids, have a nice home etc. You also have a perfectly decent if not stellar career.

If you had a stellar career something else would have to give and your life would be less successful in those aspects. You would be a more successful civil servant but probably a less successful friend, mother, wife and less rounded person.

Which is better?

If it helps, I’m a reluctant SAHM with similar age (1 yr younger) DC and would kill to be where you are!

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Defaultuser · 06/11/2020 18:07

You put in the initial hard graft and got yourself in a position where you have a good work life balance. I wouldn't see that as a failure.

ellsbellls · 06/11/2020 20:10

So grateful for all these thoughts. It seems that there’s plenty of us in the same boat and others who have been able to rationalise their achievements in a way that I haven’t yet.

@minipie I think that’s right, I have always equated career success with life success. I really don’t know why though and I think that’s probably the heart of it. I’ve also probably been guilty early in my working life of judging others who were coasting along in their jobs and thinking that that would never be me 🙄!

@littlepiggiesinblankets Public accountability for goals is interesting. It might help motivate me. I don’t have inattentive ADHD as far as I know but all the personality type tests that I’ve done suggest that I get bored quite easily. I’m certainly not a ‘completer-finisher’ type!

@theRuleofStix That is it exactly! My 21 year old self would be mortified at what I’ve achieved. I really thought I was going to save the world 😂!

@mischance. I agree. I need to stop the ‘shoulds’ and reflect on what personal achievement means to me now. Also completely get your point about opportunities for women of my sort of generation and the expectations that places on them.

@mynameiscalypso That made me laugh. PhDs all around then plus an acknowledgement of our respective brilliance 😂.

Thanks all!

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