Keep a "Energy Journal" for one week. Note which activities leave you feeling drained and which leave you feeling recharged, even if they were difficult. 2. Distinguish Talent from Passion You can be good at something without loving it.
If you feel stuck, change your surroundings. Surround yourself with people who are already in their element. Their energy is often the catalyst you need to recognize your own potential. Finding Your Element: How to Discover Your Tale...
Being in your element usually involves "flow," a state where the challenge of the task perfectly matches your skills. Keep a "Energy Journal" for one week
Trace the thread of those early interests. They often point to your core elemental nature before it was buried by adult expectations. 4. Practice "Productive Prototyping" Distinguish Talent from Passion You can be good
Finding your "element" isn’t about picking a career from a list; it’s about locating the intersection where your natural aptitude meets your personal passion. When you find it, you don’t just work—you thrive. 1. Identify Your "Flow" States
Before the world told you what you should be, what were you drawn to?