Passion
Politics today has become ‘a profession’, it used to be about passion: JP MP Firoz Rashid
Sangsad Bhaban, Apr 9 (UNB) - Jatiya Party MP Kazi Firoz Rashid today said politics has now become “a profession”, which used to be about passion.
“Earlier, politics was about passion, and now it has become a profession,” he said while participating in the discussion on Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina's proposal raised under Rule 147 on the occasion of the golden jubilee of Jatiya Sangsad.
He said that if anyone learns that a groom belongs to the ruling party, “they say Alhamdulillah.”
Firoz Rashid said that politics is the only way to change the lives of the countrymen. “Now it has become a profession. Earlier, politics was about passion and people put their lives at risk,” he added.
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During the Pakistan era, he recalled, if a man was involved in politics, he did not get married as he would not get any job.
Firoz Rashid claimed that the parliament has many achievements along with weaknesses.
“Till date, it is not able to form a commission (on Bangabandhu's murder)… Because there was a major conspiracy behind the assassination of Bangabandhu. Dalim, Farooq, Rashid went and did it… it did not happen just like that. There was a conspiracy behind it, you didn't figure it out.”
Pointing to Workers Party President Rashed Khan Menon and Jasad President Hasanul Haque Inu, the Jatiya Party lawmaker said that the names of extreme left and extreme right politicians cannot be uttered.
Read More: Inu proposes formation of parliamentary body to review constitution
“Because all have boarded the boat. You (Awami League) will ride the boat. You are the captain of the boat. They are on the boat and asking ‘how far?’,” he said.
Firoz Rashid said that the nation is now divided into two parts.
“There is no neutral person. Teachers, doctors, intellectuals, journalists are all divided. The entire country is now divided into two parts,” he said.
He also claimed that businessmen belonging to BNP got the most business during this period.
Read More: Bringing any party to election is not govt’s responsibility: Info Minister
1 year ago
How to find your passion for a more fulfilling career?
Time and again we have been told to follow our passion. There’s a saying that if you find your passion, you will never have to work a day in your life. Now the question arises that how one can find one’s passion? Many people start something and make good progress in their careers. But as time goes by, they seem to hit a barrier which they can't quite overcome. In this article, we will look at some of the ways you can rekindle your career through renewed passion.
How do you find your passion in your career?
Search for your “flow state”
Every person has efficiency at something or the other. It’s the things that we enjoy doing because we are masters of it. Psychologist Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi defines this state of enjoying something as a flow state.
When you are climbing the career ladder, you will often be tasked with things that you don’t enjoy. And that’s completely alright. Not all of us are jack of all trades. If you feel that something that you are doing isn’t providing innate satisfaction, it’s probably time for you to look for your flow state. Find something that keeps you engaged where you feel the work is effortless. Once you do that, it will become much easier for you to engage in work and find passion in your tasks.
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Having a growth mindset
One of the reasons, why people reach a rut in their career, is because they aren’t incorporating a growth mentality. Building a career will come with new challenges. The problem arises when you look at these challenges as barriers and not opportunities.
Having a growth mentality is looking at every barrier as a developmental opportunity. A new challenge means something new to learn and incorporate into your skillset. A growth mindset will allow you to face your challenges head-on rather than avoid them at every step.
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Reassess your skillset
Every step of moving up your career will be different than the previous one. Every new position comes with its challenges and solving them requires a different skill set. The question is, are you well equipped for the challenges?
People complain that they can’t find passion in their work because they don’t enjoy it. In most cases, the enjoyment doesn’t come because they aren’t sufficiently skilled for that specific task. While you are stuck wondering about your work, you should also take some time off to reassess your existing skillset. Understanding what is lacking and what can be done to acquire the missing skills will go a long way to rekindle the passion for work.
Read: Turning passion into profit: The story of Badaghat's pigeon entrepreneur
Creating the “T” of your career
Here is an analogy for the T shape career. Often, we put our central focus on a single task. You might be thinking that is the core aspect of a full-time job. But is it though? Do you have to drag yourself into a boring routine over and over again? The truth is you don’t. And that is where the T career comes.
It's like having a central pillar which is your core career. Just like the two hands of a T, you can have other self-fulfilling activities to coincide and complement your core job. Sometimes following your passion alone won't ensure bread and butter. Instead, you can kindle and channel your passion through things you like doing as a side hustle. That way, you will always have economic safety as well as rejuvenation from doing things you like doing.
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Set finances aside
Let's be honest, we’re always concerned about making money. It’s the prime reason why people wake up every morning to go to work. What if human beings do not need to worry about money? Almost everyone would leave their job. This is because money acts as a constraint to passion.
Take some time off from your usual activities and reflect on your life. What will you do if you are free from the worry of earning money? Is it something that aligns with your existing responsibilities? If so, then incorporate them into your daily activity ledger. If it doesn’t, you can always go back to the T-shaped career approach.
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Let ideas flow
There's a saying that if you are bent on seeing the worst, you will only experience the worst. The same holds when it comes to finding passion. Are you sure you aren’t dead set about not letting passion through?
Often people become so pessimistic with their life that they don’t let themselves be motivated again. The existing works become a motion for them which they go on about. However, you should be open to ideas. You should let the ideas flow so that you can find what motivates you, what drives you. Look around, look for inspiration, you will be sure to find your cause.
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Construct your umbrella
Passion can come from all sorts of different places. And oftentimes they might be completely unrelated. It becomes increasingly difficult to channel these different streams into a single work. As a result, many people fail to find the right passion for their workflow.
However, there is a workaround to this. Your sources of inspiration may feel disjointed with each other. But you can try and find a connection between them. If not all, at least some of it will work together to inspire you.
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Know your limit
People will tell you that take a leap and the net will appear. As a matter of fact, that could not be away from reality. Real-life isn’t a fairy tale. You cannot expect things to go according to your whims. In search of passion, make sure you aren’t pushing your limit. You cannot leave everything just because you haven’t found your passion. As you keep searching for your call, make sure you have something to fall back on if you can't make any headway.
Bottom Line
Finding your passion for a more fulfilling career isn’t easy. Yet it's important to make sure your career doesn’t hit a rut. The process of finding your passion should focus on what you want and what motivates you in your work. Finding a balance between these will certainly alleviate your career prospects.
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3 years ago
IKIGAI: The Japanese Secret to a Long Healthy life
The Japanese have greatly impacted the world with their distinctive culture for many years. Their entertainment, food, history have gotten the attention of many neighbouring countries and even regions in the west. Despite having so many unique attributes to their heritage, few can compete with Ikigai in terms of depth and meaning. More of a concept than a discipline, Ikigai has been regarded by many as an ideology that has resulted in the nation’s long life expectancy. Let us see if Ikigai, the Japanese secret to a long healthy life, is truly a solution that the world has overlooked.
What Is Ikigai?
Ikigai is an ideology of sorts that prioritizes finding your purpose and value in life. It’s pretty existential but holds moral integrity in high regard.
There are four main “pillars” that everything in the Ikigai is based on:
- what are you good at;
- what the world needs;
- what you love; and
- what you can be paid for.
In Japanese culture, work and putting in long hours are some of the most important things one can do with his or her life. Therefore, Ikigai is a mental framework that gives the average person motivation to continue every day with an objective in mind. This could either mean applying the Ikigai in the context of work, or even as a wholesome frame of mind to centre one’s self outside of the working environment.
Ikigai isn’t a framework that was created as far back as the feudal ages; in fact, the term was coined by Akihiro Hasegawa, a psychologist and professor at Toyo Eiwa University. “Iki” means life in Japanese and “Gai” means something that is deemed valuable. The ideology has seen a basic rendition of its framework in novels dating back to the 60s, but it is truly more relevant now than ever.
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Why Is Ikigai Popular?
Ikigai may have a relatively simple structure, but it’s simplicity makes it easier to navigate around life when one is overloaded with stress, anxiety or purposelessness.
Looking at what you love and what you are good at specifically, these two pillars are all about self-improvement and reflection in order to know which steps to take. It is a gateway to a more optimistic mindset that can take the form of exercise, being with nature, having gratitude, and being able to come to terms with the imperfections in life. Ikigai has been often correlated with the older generations in Japan and has often been correlated with the population’s long life span.
As the nation has recently been faced with underwhelming retirement pensions, more have opted to prolong their employment period, which is where Ikigai comes in. What you can do for the world and what you can be paid for are the more practical of the two pillars that are less prone to subjective interpretation, where any citizen can decide where they would like their career to go and how they can find meaning to it. Although working life may not be the most common way to apply Ikigai, it is still useful to consider as many Japanese spend the majority of their lives working.
Finding purpose within and without a career is where the true balance ultimately comes in as many who do eventually retire craft the will and even a sense of urgency to start a new chapter of their lives - whether that could be with a new profession or a hobby that involves loved ones.
Many are at the mercy of their worries when approaching the late stages of their career and even retirement as the future is open-ended and unknown. Ikigai helps to visualise the future as a canvas that can be painted by your dreams and goals, without an end in mind. This does explain why many Japanese in their 80s are still achieving impressive goals while preserving an optimistic mindset.
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3 years ago