February 28, 2011
Living Your Soul Purpose: 5 Ways to Know if You're Stuck in the Mud
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By Melissa Evans

The term sole purpose is one I use in the business world. When a company is totally focused on how they can be of the utmost service, they become focused on fulfilling their sole purpose. A company's sole purpose can also be its soul purpose. Providing the utmost service as a company means providing the utmost service to each individual who buys the product or uses the service provided by the company.

For example, when Bill Gates founded Microsoft, his sole purpose was to place a personal computer in every household in the world. His sole purpose was also his soul purpose as he recognized personal computers would enhance the lives of everyone who had one in their home. He understood the value of his gift, not only because of what he stood to gain personally, but also because of the potential it created for others to gain too.

When you're living your soul purpose, you feel passionate about what you do and you have an energy about you that radiates from you and let's people know you love what you do.

Things that might indicate you're not in your soul purpose and it's time to move on include:

  1. Heart palpitations; a feeling of being anxious to move on.
  2. Feeling heavy every morning as you get up and get ready for work; hitting the snooze button on your alarm over and over!
  3. Dreading going to work.
  4. Little things at work that may normally have gone unnoticed begin to get on your nerves.
  5. You know there's something missing and you know you have something more to give, you're just not sure what that something is.
     

The amount of time you spend in a job and the energy you feel when you're in that job can be likened to the changing seasons in nature. When seasons change, you feel a change of energy. When your energy changes in your job, it marks the end of your season there and it's time to move on to the next one.

If you're not in your zone; if you're not meant to be there, it's not something you should view as a bad thing but it's something you must recognize and do something about. You must take steps to move on. When it feels like work, it's not your soul purpose.

When you're in your soul purpose, you will still be working but you'll be so passionate about what you're doing it won't feel like work. Moving on might mean setting up your own business and working for yourself. In most cases, someone working for themselves will work far harder than someone working for someone else, but they will feel energized by what they're doing because they're doing what they're destined to do. When you're working for someone else, especially in a large organization, you generally have only one aspect of the business to focus on, but when you're starting your own business, you need to have an understanding of every aspect of your business. The demands can be greater yet you will feel charged by the experience.

When you're living in your soul purpose, you're passionate about it so you share your gifts with other people. You're driven, but not in an egotistical way, to look for ways to help others. Your mind is divine and whatever your gifts are, the things you need to help you make use of those gifts and serve in your soul purpose will come to you. When you know those things are coming your way, you're open to receiving them and you're also open to recognizing what you're destined to do next at each stage in your journey. You recognize what it is you need to do and you work at it every day but it feels right.

When you love what you do, you will initiate getting the energy you need to do what you do really well, jump out of bed in the morning already thinking of other ways you might serve and anticipate what you need to do to make a difference. When you're passionate about doing something, you become unstoppable.

Melissa Evans, also known as the "Guru of Implementation," is a no-nonsense dynamic speaker, author, and business advisor who helps business owners and business executives become more profitable while staying true to themselves. As a founding member of The Broshe Group, she coaches, consults and mentors entrepreneurs on how to make a six-figure income within a 12-month program, while decreasing stress and increasing fun and freedom in their lives. Find out more about The Broshe Group's business consulting, corporate mentoring, business coaching and "10 Minutes to Success" programs at http://www.broshegroup.com/.

 



Posted by Staff at 11:40 PM