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December 22, 2009

The LWPS Team seeded this - your personal - blog with this post so that you could see it when you clicked on "Your Blog" in the far upper left corner of this webpage.

Please read this post about "Why is creating career/lifework planning posts in my personal blog so important?".

To create another post, just click the "Post a new entry" link in the upper left corner of this post above the iconic silhouetted image with the question mark "?". (More about creating posts.)

Please COPY this post to your personal blog and tell us how you found LWPS and what you hope to get out of it1.

This is your post to do with as you please or to leave it as it is. When you are ready, just click the "Edit" link below and make any changes you wish.


Click Getting started with your LWPS account. here or in your Brief Description box to the right.


 (Here is the original source for this post. Here is a list of all seeds. Check back, it may have changed.)


1 If your do nothing with your account over the next few months, you will receive an email with the content of this post.

Posted by sushmitha | 0 comment(s)

July 21, 2009

Dr. Laurence Shatkin just posted a tweet about a four (4) page PDF entitled "Career planning the second time around" which is pages 12-15 of the Summer 2009 • Occupational Outlook Quarterly.

I mention it here because the article emphasizes the need to "know yourself" through self-assessment and reflection. "Knowing yourself" is not only important the "second time around", it is also important everytime you either think you are about to have, are in the middle of one, or have just come through a transition. (http://lifeworkps.com/transitions)

But most career changers need to assess themselves, especially their skills and interests. “Self-awareness is critical, but it’s not much appreciated or understood,” says Jansen. “It’s important in identifying what you want to do, what your skills are, and what you don’t—and do—like about your current occupation.”

Self-assessment can be a difficult process because it involves identifying personal flaws as well as strengths, and failures as well as successes. “It’s a big stumbling block, because many people are resistant to the process,” says New York career counselor Angel Román. Like it or not, though, career changers need to consider their values, skills, and interests.
Self-assessment is step 2 of the career/lifework planning process. Reflection is step 6.

As you read the article and review the steps of the career/lifework planning process, you should be thinking about where you will record/collect the data, information and knowledge about yourself. Consider your blog and create a post like mine that I call "My LifeWork Planning Portal". It is the MOST important post in my blog. It shoudl be in yours as well.

Click on the tag "know yourself" below to see other post.

Keywords: 2-2, 20%, 2009, 3Q09, 7/19, 7Rs, Career planning the second time around, collect, hph, hubbard, know yourself, record, reflect, reflection, self-assessment, Shatkin, Stage 2, Step 2, transitions

Posted by Pete Hubbard (LWPS Founder) | 0 comment(s)

June 26, 2009

I stay focused on and connected to my LifeWork by ...
  1. ... reminders from my 43things account
  2. ... maintaining a very short list of the key words that describe my LifeWork, and
  3. ... creating a Google alert (GA) for variations of the key words in that list. I will get emails when someone writes about my key words. Here is a list of my GAs, and
  4. ... finding Wikipedia articles about aspects my LifeWork (like career development, etc) and adding them to my Wikipedia watchlist, then making a note in my calendar to review my watchlist periodically, and
  5. ... periodically sending out short notes (Tweets are a maximum of 140 characters) to my several networks.

Click your browser's BACK/Return arrow to return to the post that brought you here, or return to ...


Keywords: 2009, 4-6, 43things, 4Q09-3, 60%, GA, Google Alerts, hph, hubbard, in tune, key words, remind, reminders, Stage 4, Staying focused on and connected to my LifeWork, Step 6, watchlist, Wikipedia

Posted by Pete Hubbard (LWPS Founder) | 0 comment(s)

May 28, 2009

This post will contain links to other posts which will provide text for each of my sections in my VisualCV at http://www.visualcv.com/petehubbard

  1. My Resume
  2. My ...
  3. My ...


Click your browser's BACK/Return arrow to return to the post that brought you here, or return to ...



Keywords: 20%, 2009, 4Q09, 9/20, hph, hubbard, resume, VisualCV

Posted by Pete Hubbard (LWPS Founder) | 0 comment(s)

May 22, 2009

When you have a thought that you want to preserve, journal it ("ink it" either on paper or computer) then "link it" so you can easily find it again.1 

Journaling captures your thoughts so they become real for you and so you can review them later and reflect upon what is important to you before, now and maybe in the future.

But you must be able to find related thoughts so it is equally important that you "link" your thoughts via tags, and hyperlinks in your blog and indices and table of contents in either your blog or your paper journal.  

Click on the "journaling" tag below for more posts about this important topic.


1 I got the idea for the phrase "Think it, ink it, link it" from a similar phrase "Think it, ink it" from these pages in the Higher Awareness website.

Keywords: 1Q10-2, 2010, 60%, Higher Awareness, hph, ink it, journaling, journals, link it ... the power of journaling, main_index, Think it

Posted by Pete Hubbard (LWPS Founder) | 0 comment(s)

April 26, 2009

Gail passed away peacefully this morning, April 26, 2009, at 6:10.

She was fighting congestion during the night and the antibiotics did not help. She was unconscious and unresponsive when she died, so I will conclude that she was not in pain or distress and did not suffer. (Certainly the way I wish to go.)

She had decided to donate her body for education purposes1 and after a year or two I will receive her cremated remains.

Gail did not want a service or any special treatment. I was going to help her compose her obituary, but we never got started. So I will devote this post ( http://lifeworkps.com/hubbard/weblog/3965.html ) on my personal blog to collecting our thoughts about Gail.

This will be a work-in-progress, so please bookmark and return often to see how it develops. Please help me by sending me a note with anything you wish me to add or correct.

Gail Elizabeth Hubbard 10/16/1944 – 4/26/2009

Gail was born October 19, 1944, in Brunswick, Maine, the second of five children of Harrison Weston and Elizabeth Swanton Hubbard (both deceased). Gail is survived by her son Mark Aaron Solook, his wife Becky and their daughter Blake Solook of Alvin, Texas; her older brother Harrison Peter Hubbard and three (3) younger brothers John, James and Joseph Hubbard, five step-brothers and sisters (Mike, Jan, Kitty, Ruth and Bill Jolly), several cousins -- including Sue Hartman in Cumberland Center, Maine; members of the Carl Bartlett "Bart" Swanton family in Maine; and Gustavo Rivera, MD, a long-time friend now working at NIH.

Gail lived in Red Bank, NJ; Sturbridge, MA; and Jamesburg, NJ, until she met and married John Solook, whom she later divorced. ... She graduated from Douglass College in New Brunswick, NJ, with a BA degree in library science, and taught [ junior high ?] mathematics [ in Connecticut ? ] for a short time. Gail loved to sing whether with a choir2 or as a soloist; had a delightful sense of humor; and cherished time spent in the past 8 years on the Maine coast at Mere Point, near Brunswick.

Gail’s greatest accomplishment in her final ten (10) years was the creation and maintenance of two Yahoo support groups3 (mailing lists) dedicated to one of the several diseases she suffered. Her proudest moment was when she was able to convince a group of doctors to reference her groups at a conference.


1Humanity Gifts Registrar (HGR) has selected Temple Medical School in Philadelphia to receive Gail's gift of her body.

2While at college (Pete at Rutgers, New Brunswick), Gail and Pete sang in the community college and shared a profoundly moving experience singing Brahm's German Requiem at the request of Eugene Ormandy (Philadeplhia Orchestra) in the Philadelphia Concert Hall a week after President Kennedy was assasinated. The program was videotaped and shown to the world.

3Panniculitis Support group at http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/panniculitis/ and the InternationalMesentericPanniculitisSociety.  Please read this eulogy post from one of the many friends Gail had nurtured in these support groups. There are several others in the Messages section that you may wish to read.

 

Keywords: 2009, 2Q09, 4/26, 80%, death, Gail, Gail Elizabeth Hubbard 10-16-1944 – 4-26-2009, hph, hubbard, obituary, sister

Posted by Pete Hubbard (LWPS Founder) | 0 comment(s)

April 07, 2009

Writing a song is like any other project, it starts with an idea. Where does it go from there?
Do I like the idea?  Does it have a solid foundation? Do I get excited about it? Have I shown my idea to others with the hopes of expansion?

The idea;
The idea can be anything from a bass line, guitar run, drum fill, spoken word, vocal melody, almost anything.
For now I'll just call it a guitar run.
The guitar run needs to have some kind of hook or groove. This is what I call the foundation.
The foundation can be any part of the song, wether it be an intro, verse, or chorus it doesn't matter so long as you can build off of it. With a solid foundation, the song has the ability to write the rest itself.
Where does it go from there;
As I wrote before (With a solid foundation, the song has the ability to write itself)
That being said, it doesn't really write itself, but it should give you multiple places to go. Try a bunch out, and find a new idea that sets up the next section of the song. If you find yourself getting stuck, your foundation might not be as solid as you once thought. The great thing about this is you can go back and tweak your original idea, and make it even stronger.
Are you excited about;
Do you want to keep playing it over and over again? I always get a warm and fuzzy feeling when I get that 1st idea of a song. The tune runs in my head all day, everywhere I go. I can't wait to get back to my guitar and start expanding on it.
Showing it to others with the hopes of expansion;
I usually play a new idea at band practice when we're warming up to see if anyone notices. When they ask "what is that?" I show it to them, and we start working on it together. That is a great feeling.
Sometimes I can't wait til practice, so I write the whole thing, and the band helps me fine tune it. They add dynamics, breaks, and sometimes new parts to the song.

 

Keywords: bass, drums, foundation, groove, guitar, hook, music, musician, percussions, song, song writing, vocals, writing

Posted by John Jennings | 0 comment(s)

March 24, 2009

Many LifeWork Planning Services (LWPS) posts and LWPS Google Templates (GTs) are incomplete and subject to (significant) change.
  1. Some hyperlinks do not work because I wanted them to be placeholders
  2. Some active hyperlinks connect to posts that I have just started and need more work, or to the wrong post because I wasn't paying attention 
  3. Some paragraphs, sentences or phrases don't make sense because I just wanted to record a thought and either got distracted or didn't want to take the time (at that time) to clean them up or elaborate on them  
  4. Some GTs are almost empty because I just wanted to get the template URL
I've chosen to publish these incomplete posts and templates because ...
  1. I don't know when I will ever be able to "perfect"all of the post and documents. (As I said on the home page,  - - - THIS PLATFORM IS A WORK IN PROGRESS (about 30% done) FOR DEMONSTRATION PURPOSES - - -
    Sections are disorganized, some links are dead, words are mispelled, etc..
    Even though I work on it almost daily, it will be a long time before it is complete.)
  2. I believe that if you were able to find me, you are smart enough to get a sense of my intention (for a post or template) and to run with it - your way.

pete@lifeworkps.com
Even this Status of LWPS as of 12/2009 is out of date.


Keywords: 1Q11-1, 2011, 80%, change, GT, hph, hubbard, incomplete, LWPS and GTs are incomplete and subject to (significant) change

Posted by Pete Hubbard (LWPS Founder) | 0 comment(s)

March 19, 2009

As an aid to help you quickly return to the precise location within a post, I will place a "#" in the beginning of a line and make it a hyperlink (permalink) for that line.

When you click a "#", look at  the tag (after the "#") that appears after the URL (link) in your browser's address box.

That tag will change for each new "#" you click.

When you choose a line you want to return to later, you can  ...
  1. bookmark that URL/link so you return to that precise line, or you can 
  2. COPY that URL/link and PASTE it into ...
    1. a note or calendar item, or
    2. ??

Keywords: 20%, 2010, 2Q10-3, hph, hubbard, move, permalink, Using the "#" permalink

Posted by Pete Hubbard (LWPS Founder) | 0 comment(s)

March 10, 2009

There are thousands of resources devoted to some aspect of career development, planning and/or job search, and you are probably asking "Where do I start?". The answer depends upon where you are at this moment and how much time, energy and interest you have.

  1. If you have little time and need a job right now, then you'll will need to start your job search. Check out this section of the Riley Guide and get a copy of Richard Bolles' "What Color Is Your Parachute?" and read Chapter 1 "The Five Best Ways to Hunt for a Job (and the Five Worst)". I'll be adding more resources here.
  2. If you have time, energy and interest and want to be more certain about what kind of work you want, you should start here to obtain an in-depth self-understanding about your work needs and interests.
  3. If you have more time, energy and interest and want to discover the work you were meant to do, start here.
.... more later ....

Keywords: 1000's of career resources; where do I start?, 2009, 40%, 4Q09-3, DW, hph, hubbard, library, new, portal, welcome, Welcome - readers of the "Employment" webpage on the Jefferson County Library website

Posted by Pete Hubbard (LWPS Founder) | 0 comment(s)

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