Exogeny Network ™

Bringing innovative audience-driven media from an alternative point of view to an enlightened planetary audience...
Home
Guests A-C
Guests D-F
Leonard Dan
Victor & Kooch Daniels
Angelica Del Mar
Laila del Monte
Claudia Dillaire
Karyn Dolan
Bet Dotson
Linda Drake
Ellen Dugan
Elizabeth Eagan-Cox
John Edmonds
Alexandra Everist
Ann Faison
Dinah Chaudoir Federer
Kenaz Filan
Larry Flaxman
Sue Frederick
Guests G-M
Guests N-R
Guests S-Z
Past Guests
Gia and Greg's Wedding
Exogeny Center
Book Reviews
Community Service
Contact Us
Do IT GREEN
Downsizing-Living Small
Dawn of Shades
Voice of the People Radio
Exogeny Family
Exogeny General Store
Exogeny Gardens
Exogeny Kitchen
Exogeny Kitchen Store
Exogeny Grocery
Events
Get Ready GO! General Sto
Ghosts
Get-Ready-GO!
Glamping
Gia Pets
Pet's Place to Shop
Guest Book(s)
Gulf Coast Region
tryitoneverythingspecial
Rescue Shelters Organizat
Exogeny Network FAQ
Exogeny New Orleans
Military
Newsletter
Reciprocal Links
Gregory Miller
Center
Home
facebook
twitter
Bonsai Diabetes Health
warriorsofthelight
test page
World Self Management Ins

Sue Frederick
Sue Frederick appeared on Gia Scott's Dawn of Shades on June 8, 2010.










Sue Frederick


Author and Career Intuitive Sue Frederick’s work, described as a “breath of fresh air” and “an enlightened new perspective,” has been featured in The New York Times, Yoga Journal, Natural Health, and Fit Yoga, and venues like The Crossings Retreat Center and Naropa University. She’s the author of I See Your Dream Job: A Career Intuitive’s Guide to FInding Work You Came Here to Do (St.Martin’s Press), Dancing at Your Desk:
A Metaphysical Guide to Job Happiness
, and BrilliantDay.





Here are 6 Ways to Open Yourself Up to

Your Own

“Dream Job” Guidance


by Career Intuitive Sue Frederick



1)    Meditate every day. This practice of meditation quiets the chatter of the mind and connects us to our divinity. It puts us in the realm where our solutions live.

2)    Intend It. “I am using my gifts and talents with all of my passion to make the world a better place in my unique way.” Say those words whenever you doubt you’ll find your true work. When contemplating a new career, examine if the new work is in alignment with this statement. If so, go after it.

3)    Dream big. Pretend you have $5 million in your bank account, but you still have to have a career you love. Without money concerns, which career would you choose?

4)    Ask for dream guidance. Before falling asleep, ask to have a dream revealing your next career step. Keep a journal by your bed and write your dreams as soon as you wake up.

5)    Stop the pitiful thinking. Your fear voice tells you all the reasons why you can’t do what you want to do for a living. You might think that’s being “practical” or “realistic”. It’s not. It’s your pitiful self abusing your powerful self. Choose to be your brilliant, powerful, fearless, divine self. The world will align itself with your dreams.

6)    Spend time around water. Lakes, streams, oceans, pools and even bathtubs open us up to receiving guidance from the other realms. Water loosens our drip on “reality” and relaxes us into a receptive state—which is how we mist feel to get answers.

Sue Frederic is the author of I Can See Your Dream Job: A Career Intuitive Shows You How To Discover What You Were Put On Earth To Do (St. Martin’s Press; September 2009).






Our entire economy is changing. 


Gone are the days when you went to work for a company fresh out of school and worked for them until you retired at age 62.


Most people will have more than 1 career during their lifetime.


People who are happy often have a satisfying career.


Long lived people are usually happier people.


What is a satisfying career?


How can I find a career that I love and pays the bills in this economy?


When you are struggling to pay the bills, what does it matter what your life mission is?


Is it too late for me to find my right path?


Will knowing my right path just help me FIND a job?


How can a career intuitive help?


What is a career intuitive anyhow?


I'm tired of jobs that barely pay the bills and leave me tired, unhappy, and stressed all the time.  What can I do to change all of that?  I have to support myself and I have no savings left.


Can't a person have a bit of luck at finding their dream job?


I've been desperately working at finding a job, any job, and I can't find anything.  I'm desperate and broke.  What's next now?


I'm less than 20 years from retirement, I'm unemployed, I've lost my home, I've spent my savings, and I thought I had my dream job before.  How can I survive and get another job?




Six Things to do When You’ve Lost Your Job:

Career Intuitive and Author Sue Frederick offers career guidance

Career intuitive and author Sue Frederick, whose work has been featured in The New York Times, says: “If your career has recently ended, now is the time to think out of the box about what you’ve come here to do. This is your great opportunity for reinvention. In order to tap into the great abundance that still abounds on this planet, think new thoughts about your work.”
Frederick offers these six powerful tips to help people who’ve lost a job

1.    Change Your Story! Quit telling your sad story to everyone. Take a deep breath and recognize the gift in this opportunity to reinvent yourself. It’s not the end of your world, it’s the beginning. Quiet the fear thinking and tap into your higher intuitive self where you’ll find guidance you can trust.
2.    Be grateful for this opportunity to reinvent, and be honest about how unhappy and off-path you’ve been. Make a list of the secret career dreams you’ve stuffed away because you’ve been so exhausted in your old career.
3.    Remember who you really are. Chances are good that you haven’t been living and working true to your authentic self and what you came here to do – or you wouldn’t have hit this bump in the road. Stop hiding. Claim your real talents and gifts and realign your work so that you’re making a living directly from those talents.
4.    Look around you at this new world and ask: What needs do I see in the world that inspire me to take action, think out of the box, and use my gifts to make a difference? (Whatever idea excites you most is a clue to your next career.)

5.    Stop asking: “Who do I think I am to try to a new career?” Start asking: “Who do I think I am to ignore the work I came here to do? Who do I think I am to ignore the gifts and talents I brought with me? Who do I think I am to ignore the purpose of my life story?”
6.    Surrender what you know. The new direction reveals itself only when you’re open and have let go of your old story. When you have a new idea, take one baby step at a time and surrender the outcome. The rest will unfold gracefully as long as you don’t get in the way.

Frederick’s new book, I See Your Dream Job (available on Amazon.com) and her career sessions and teleseminars available through http://www.CareerIntuitive.org provide powerful tools that help people align their lives with their mission to find true success and abundance.