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Hi, my name is Michael Palmer.  I'm a Business Coach and the founder of Beyondbreakthroughs.com Coaching.  As a coach, I'm privileged to work with people that want to be exceptional in their business and life. Our clients want to lead a life where they can look back and say "there is nothing left...I gave it my all and squeezed out every drop." A breakthrough moment occurs when a client sees that it has been their own self imposed limiting perceptions that have kept the lid on their performance. Beyond the breakthrough the pathway to results become clear, actions to take seem natural and the results come rapidly.

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Finding your path in life looks different for everyone
Written by Michael Palmer   
Thursday, 11 February 2010 14:53

This is a post written by a friend and past collegue in response to some twitter posts that I had made one afternoon about my clients search for success.

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Finding your path in life looks different for everyone and I think that is what makes it interesting.  Thanks for the response Jeff!  What is your take?

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I agree with most of Michael's messages but his recent one concerning knowing what you want resonated more than the others.

I have never been (overly) jealous of those who've accumulated or accomplished more. Since I was young, however, I've been envious of those that had an unyielding sense of what they wanted or wanted to be. I'm not referring to an 8 year old who wants to play in the NFL, or a 12 year old who fleetingly wants to be a rock star - but those who seem to have acquired a glimpse of their future and are not willing to bend until that future is their reality.

During the summers in my university years I worked in a bar and there was a bartender there I had known for years. He had been an accomplished soccer player and a classic overachiever all his life. He was approaching 30 and while his peers were furthering their careers he was (seemingly) toiling away in a dead-end job. The reason: he hadn't been accepted to medical school. Yet. The entire time he was taking courses, doing volunteer work at hospitals and preparing for his next career. Every time I witnessed someone give him a hard time about moving on or choosing a different path his reaction was akin to if someone had belittled him for continuing to breathe or eat. There was no other option. If he was 50 years old by the time he was accepted he would simply be the "old guy in class". I admired his conviction but even more so I felt jealous that he possessed such certainty about what he wanted to be.

With that certainty and the clarity of knowing what you want the rest is simple (if not easy). The commitment required, the creativity needed, the persistence demanded seems to be a natural byproduct of having that sense.

I think some are fortunate in that knowing what they want their path to be comes naturally to them; a gift. For others, most even, finding that path is the most formidable challenge they face. Once you find your calling the rest will fall in place - not that it will come easily to you but the traits needed to achieve the objective will reveal themselves and you're left merely to harness them.

I would assume that a large part of the value you offer your clients is to help them find that path for themselves and, to me, there are very few more significant gifts you can give to people.

Keep up the good work my man.

Jeff Kinch is a Sr. Account Executive for industry leading SaaS company - avid reader, sports fan, frustrated athlete and bulldog owner residing in Toronto, Ontario.

Michael Palmer is a life coach based in Toronto, Canada who works with clients in the U.S., Canada and around the world.


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