March 2007 Archives

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Update: Above are the books that have come out of Joni Cole's Day Diary project. I submitted an entry on March 27, 2007, my birthday, and Joni was kind enough to send me a birthday greeting. The book from the 2007 project is The Watercooler Diaries (my submission wasn't chosen), while the other is from a similar project in Jun 2003.

The makers of Lady Speed Stick® 24/7 and author Joni Cole of the series This Day in the Life: Diaries from Women across America are partnering on the first National Day Diary Project. Joni Cole was having a bad day when she conceived the idea for the This Day in the Life book series. Trying to deal with a serious illness in her family, job woes and a child who refused to wear socks in the winter, she wondered if anyone else was feeling so low. What were other women doing and feeling and thinking on the very same day? And so This Day in the Life was born out of self-pity, curiosity and a need to connect.

Submissions for the March 27 diary date can be entered online from March 27-April 6, 2007, to qualify for a chance at publication.

I submitted a diary entry on March 27 because it happens to be my birthday!

You can read more about the diary project here



Entry by Kathy Hansen. Learn more.

 

Here's an article I recently wrote for Quint Careers:

If you're confused about what to do with your career -- or what to do next with your career -- and you haven't gained insight from taking assessments , there is another way. You can learn more about yourself, gain insight into the best career for you, and plot out how to get there through creating stories.

A small but growing collection of research, for example, has looked at using story and narrative in career counseling. “Psychotherapy is based on the premise that we each create our own life story from the time we are born,” wrote Jack Maguire in The Power of Personal Storytelling. Career counselors are increasingly using narrative approaches to encourage clients to build their career stories.

Authors Christensen and Johnston suggested in the Journal of Career Development that developing narratives can significantly help individuals to know what to emphasize in their career planning. They proposed that counselors perceive clients as both authors and central characters in their career stories, which they are “concurrently constructing and enacting.” Constructing their career story, the authors said, enables clients to discover connections and meaning in their careers that they might not have otherwise. When individuals imagine their desired future stories, they facilitate their belief that their storied, envisioned future will play out in reality. The authors' research indicated that, indeed, clients who could tell these future stories tended to be “more effective in bringing those plans to fruition,” while Maguire characterized the narrative-therapy process as revising or replacing negative stories with positive ones.

Instead of answering the question traditionally explored in career counseling, "Who am I?" by listing traits such as interests, skills, aptitudes, and values, narrative approaches articulate the job-seeker's preferred future. Larry Cochran, who has devoted an entire book to the use of narrative in career counseling, notes that the narrative approach emphasizes “emplotment,” which refers to how a person can cast himself or herself as the main character in a career narrative that is meaningful, productive, and fulfilling. Plotting out a career story can also help a person conceptualize the steps needed to attain his or her desired career, remind the narrator of career goals, and enable him or her to stay on track in achieving the envisioned career.

Following are a number of approaches to exploring your career desires and passions through storytelling. Considerable overlap exists among these story exercises, so don't feel you need to use all of them. But pick a couple that resonate with you and use them to examine meanings, themes, and patterns in your career to date, as well as to plot out how to attain your career dreams.



Entry by Kathy Hansen. Learn more.

 

About
A Storied Career

A Storied Career explores intersections/synthesis among various forms of
Applied Storytelling:
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  • organizational storytelling
  • storytelling for identity construction
  • storytelling in social media
  • storytelling for job search and career advancement.
  • ... and more.
A Storied Career's scope is intended to appeal to folks fascinated by all sorts of traditional and postmodern uses of storytelling. Read more ...
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About
Dr. Kathy Hansen

Kathy Hansen, PhD, is a leading proponent of deploying storytelling for career advancement. She is an author and instructor, in addition to being a career guru. More...

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The New About Me: The Ultimate Course on Reinventing Your Bio Into A Story: A program for people in the business of relationships, who need a better bio for today's hyper-connected world.



Storytelling
Tweets in the
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Pages

The following are sections of A Storied Career where I maintain regularly updated running lists of various items of interest to followers of storytelling:

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Links below are to Q&A interviews with story practitioners.


The pages below relate to learning from my PhD program focusing on a specific storytelling seminar in 2005. These are not updated but still may be of interest:

May 2012

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Shameless Plugs and Self-Promotion

Katharine Hansen
My Teaching Portfolio

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My PhD Page

 

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Personal Twitter Account My personal Twitter account: @kat_hansen
Tweets below are from my personal account.
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AStoriedCareer Twitter account My storytelling Twitter account: @AStoriedCareer

KatCareerGal Twitter account My careers Twitter account: @KatCareerGal

 

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career advice blogs member

 

Blogcritics: news and reviews

 

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Storytelling Books