Back to my first love
This past week my cohort (c15) began the specialization
section of the ALX program, in my last post I had talked about how overwhelmed
and frustrated I felt towards the end of foundations. Which is the core of the
program and runs for nine months. So in starting this new phase I knew that
some things had to change in the way that I was approaching the program. One
thing I had noticed early on is how I seem to have lost focus on why I was
doing the program any way.
Slowly it became more about scores, getting the work done
just to be done with it and when this seemed in jeopardy I would get very
stressed and frustrated. But over this past week I made a decision to pace
myself, to become more aware of what was working and what was not. I had to
back to my first love. The reason I joined the program in the first place, my
desire and thirst to understand how things worked. Understanding became my
focus, I realized how this brought back the excitement to do the work. That
when I faced a road block by way of something I did not understand instead of frustration
I welcomed the idea to learn and know more. This idea of keeping my focus on
the current work I had instead of having grades, scores and passing reminded me
of an experience I had in my banking days
One of my first jobs was as a bank teller, and like any
demand driven business where some days were slow and others not we had days the
banking hall would be filled to its capacity. I remember one of my first
experiences with this, I was petrified as to how to survive it. The banking
hall was so full with customers I could not see the other side. Making sure
that I carried out every transaction with precision was my biggest hurdle.
Because the likelihood of an error in a transactions increases with a higher
number of transactions. So I realized that in order not to run the risk of an
error the key was having all your focus on your transaction at hand, so we had
been taught.
Maintaining all my focus on the individual customer I was
serving at the time, and surely enough I noticed the bank started to clear as I
served customer after customer. The lesson that day was that sometimes when we
focus on what is ahead rather than focusing on the moment we can lose heart
cause of how daunting the task of getting to the end seems. But surely if we go
by moment by moment we will get to the end. And not downplay of getting a good
pass mark because that is important as well, but to get there I can only do it
one project at time.
I used to feel the same way, wondering if I was here to just score or to enjoy the journey of learning. For me, joining Alx was about more than just scoring; it was about learning skills that would impact the lives of others.
ReplyDeleteI can so relate to that, but our intentions usually get lost in the hustle of it all. I am glad that you went back to your own first love. In the end I think its what will sustain you. stay strong
Delete