Rabiah Coon (Host): This is More Than Work, the podcast reminding
Speaker:you that your self worth is made up of more than your job title.
Speaker:Each week, I'll talk to a guest about how they discovered that for themselves.
Speaker:You'll hear about what they did, what they're doing, and who they are.
Speaker:I'm your host, Rabiah.
Speaker:I work in IT, perform stand up comedy, write, volunteer and of course, podcast.
Speaker:Thank you for listening.
Speaker:Here we go!
Speaker:Hey, welcome back to More Than Work everybody.
Speaker:So this week I have a guest whose podcast I was actually on.
Speaker:And so we'll be linking that in the show notes, but she's here to
Speaker:talk about her today, instead of listening to me talk about myself.
Speaker:Her name is Yesim and she is an author, podcast host and career coach.
Speaker:So, welcome to More Than Work.
Yesim Nicholson:Thank you.
Yesim Nicholson:Thanks for having me.
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): Yeah.
Yesim Nicholson:I'm excited we're getting to chat again.
Yesim Nicholson:So first of all, can you just say like, you know, where I'm
Yesim Nicholson:talking to you from today?
Yesim Nicholson:So today I'm sitting in my home office near Cirencester,
Yesim Nicholson:which is west of London, about just over an hour away from London.
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): Yeah, not bad.
Yesim Nicholson:Not bad.
Yesim Nicholson:And did you have a dedicated space to work for a long time?
Yesim Nicholson:Or is that something you added like during the pandemic, like a lot of people?
Yesim Nicholson:During the pandemic, I was actually still
Yesim Nicholson:employed by an organization.
Yesim Nicholson:And obviously we all had to work from home.
Yesim Nicholson:So I did work from what was the spare room and then turned into
Yesim Nicholson:mine and my husband's office.
Yesim Nicholson:And then we would sort of take it in turns to work from here and then the
Yesim Nicholson:kitchen table, and then, you know, do the whole homeschooling at the
Yesim Nicholson:same time, spinning a hundred plates.
Yesim Nicholson:And then my husband is now.
Yesim Nicholson:back in the office and I get to still use the spare room, which is awesome.
Yesim Nicholson:So I have a very, very long commute that takes me, I don't
Yesim Nicholson:know, four and a half seconds.
Yesim Nicholson:It's quite cumbersome.
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): Oh man yeah we might have the same commute.
Yesim Nicholson:I'm just in my living room and I come from the bedroom to the living
Yesim Nicholson:room and when I want to break, I sit on the sofa like a foot away.
Yesim Nicholson:that's good.
Yesim Nicholson:You were still working in I would say just an, what we'd
Yesim Nicholson:call, what would you call it?
Yesim Nicholson:Like a normal job, I guess, like a standard job.
Yesim Nicholson:You were still employed, like by someone else.
Yesim Nicholson:Yeah.
Yesim Nicholson:Yeah.
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): in the pandemic.
Yesim Nicholson:And then at some point you switched to becoming a career coach.
Yesim Nicholson:You've got your podcast.
Yesim Nicholson:You're an author.
Yesim Nicholson:What led to that and when did that happen?
Yesim Nicholson:It's a really long story, which we could be here
Yesim Nicholson:for about 10 hours, so I'll give you a very snapshot version of it.
Yesim Nicholson:I went to university and I did the most generic course I could find, which
Yesim Nicholson:actually turned out to be amazing.
Yesim Nicholson:It was international management with German.
Yesim Nicholson:And after I left, basically all my peers went into corporate,
Yesim Nicholson:and so I followed suit.
Yesim Nicholson:And I, I worked for actually an American multinational for about
Yesim Nicholson:five years and it was really great.
Yesim Nicholson:You know, I had a great time.
Yesim Nicholson:Met some amazing people.
Yesim Nicholson:Got to travel the world.
Yesim Nicholson:Had plenty of responsibility and I could ticked all the boxes But I just remember
Yesim Nicholson:going into work one day thinking there's got to be more to life than this you
Yesim Nicholson:know, like everybody's sitting in their little cubicles typing away and that
Yesim Nicholson:was probably sort of the beginning of the journey for me in really just
Yesim Nicholson:exploring what a career can look like.
Yesim Nicholson:And so I set up my, I set up an ecommerce business.
Yesim Nicholson:This is, you know, gosh, 15, 15 or so years ago.
Yesim Nicholson:And then we moved to Australia and so I had to, you know, find
Yesim Nicholson:other work while we're over there.
Yesim Nicholson:We were there for seven years.
Yesim Nicholson:And then I became a mom and then we moved back to the UK.
Yesim Nicholson:So there's been lots of sort of I guess lots of change in my adult life
Yesim Nicholson:and in my, of my childhood as well.
Yesim Nicholson:My dad was a hotel manager, so we moved around a lot.
Yesim Nicholson:So cut a very long story short, I've experienced a lot of change over my life.
Yesim Nicholson:And with that, I've experienced lots of different jobs in different
Yesim Nicholson:countries, different cultures, different organizations, and,
Yesim Nicholson:and I, I kind of thrive on that.
Yesim Nicholson:I like the newness of it.
Yesim Nicholson:I like the challenge of something new.
Yesim Nicholson:And then getting to midlife, I noticed that That a lot of my peers
Yesim Nicholson:were not comfortable with change.
Yesim Nicholson:They were sort of stuck in jobs that they weren't enjoying.
Yesim Nicholson:And I guess I was like, well, you know, if you don't enjoy it, then
Yesim Nicholson:surely you can do something about it.
Yesim Nicholson:And obviously it's not that easy because we get dependent on the, the particular
Yesim Nicholson:salary or we get dependent on the prestige or the status that a job gives us.
Yesim Nicholson:And so I was like, well, maybe this is something that I can explore.
Yesim Nicholson:And so I developed an online program for people to attend for people
Yesim Nicholson:who were thinking about a career change and weren't quite sure whether
Yesim Nicholson:they were ready to make that leap.
Yesim Nicholson:And that went really well.
Yesim Nicholson:I did it as a trial with six people.
Yesim Nicholson:And then it sort of snowballed from there.
Yesim Nicholson:And now I spend all my days talking about career change with people from all over
Yesim Nicholson:the world, which is really exciting.
Yesim Nicholson:I love it.
Rabiah:Yeah, that's cool.
Rabiah:And I think a few things came up while you were talking through this, but one
Rabiah:of them was that just even thinking about a career change, and I, I've had
Rabiah:different sorts of managers or bosses who saw either being at the company we were
Rabiah:at was the only option really, right?
Rabiah:And the only option was to move up there or stay in one place there
Rabiah:or whatever, but that was it.
Rabiah:And then other managers who have encouraged me to pursue what I'm
Rabiah:interested in and that might be outside of it and they would be perfectly
Rabiah:happy for me if I left knowing that I was going to move forward.
Rabiah:And I think what made me think about this was that you said, you know, just you
Rabiah:started talking to people just thinking about a career change because sometimes
Rabiah:that almost seems like a betrayal.
Rabiah:Like, even if you tell your coworker, "God, I'm really like starting to
Rabiah:look at other companies, just thinking about what I want to do", they might
Rabiah:hear that and go, Oh, they're leaving the company and this is it there.
Rabiah:I can't believe they're doing this.
Rabiah:And it's interesting that even thinking about it has, is a difficult thing
Rabiah:to do at some points in your career.
Rabiah:So have you found that too?
Yesim Nicholson:Definitely.
Yesim Nicholson:I think even just thinking about it is quite stress inducing for a lot
Yesim Nicholson:of people, especially if you've been in the same industry and the same
Yesim Nicholson:company, which, you know, people of our generation are still doing.
Yesim Nicholson:They join a company when they leave university or whatever education
Yesim Nicholson:they've undertaken, and then they stick with that organization because the
Yesim Nicholson:organizations looked after them well.
Yesim Nicholson:They've been promoted, they're climbing the ladder, et cetera.
Yesim Nicholson:And and it's easy to, to, I don't want to say get stuck because, you know, for
Yesim Nicholson:some people that's really perfectly, they're perfectly happy staying in the
Yesim Nicholson:same organization for their whole lives.
Yesim Nicholson:But I guess I was more thinking of the people that, you know, do end up
Yesim Nicholson:feeling like they are stuck in a place where they don't want to be anymore.
Yesim Nicholson:So yes, I have lots of those conversations where people are
Yesim Nicholson:just like, oh my god, just even the thought of leaving here is too much.
Yesim Nicholson:I'll just bury that for a second.
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): you know, the idea that that came to me about more than
Yesim Nicholson:work was just talking to friends who lost jobs after 12 or 13 years and who were
Yesim Nicholson:and looking at my own career and just realizing how I defined myself so much on
Yesim Nicholson:my job that anything that didn't go well, there would just be devastating to me.
Yesim Nicholson:And I would lose like my sense of self worth and I can't
Yesim Nicholson:do anything else anywhere.
Yesim Nicholson:I can't succeed anywhere else.
Yesim Nicholson:And so that's why I started this was to talk about that and what
Yesim Nicholson:people did to overcome that.
Yesim Nicholson:I don't, I don't know if you were defining yourself by your job, but
Yesim Nicholson:you're someone who's definitely looking after people to help them not do that.
Yesim Nicholson:And to then find the work that matters to them.
Yesim Nicholson:And I think that's important too.
Yesim Nicholson:Like most of us can't just not work and stop working altogether.
Yesim Nicholson:I mean, that'd be nice, you know, in a way.
Yesim Nicholson:Although it might be very boring, I don't know, but there's the idea
Yesim Nicholson:that you can pursue what you want.
Yesim Nicholson:What's one of the things that you tell people when they're talking
Yesim Nicholson:about the salary because you mentioned that and that's a big one, right?
Yesim Nicholson:Yeah.
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): even me, like I work in IT, so for me to go pursue
Yesim Nicholson:stand up comedy for probably like a third or less of the pay to me
Yesim Nicholson:seems daunting, but what do you tell people when the salary is a big thing?
Yesim Nicholson:I mean, that's probably the most emotive subject
Yesim Nicholson:when you talk about career change.
Yesim Nicholson:I mean, it's an, it's an emotive topic anyway, isn't it?
Yesim Nicholson:Money.
Yesim Nicholson:You know, we have to have really real conversations around it because like
Yesim Nicholson:you say, most people aren't sitting on a trust fund and they can just, you
Yesim Nicholson:know, I'm just going to get up and do whatever the hell I want every day.
Yesim Nicholson:And, and by the way, I think that would potentially not be very fulfilling anyway.
Yesim Nicholson:We do have to be quite realistic about it.
Yesim Nicholson:So I, I am a realist in that sense that you ha you do have to plan and you have
Yesim Nicholson:to plan really well so that making that change doesn't become stressful and you
Yesim Nicholson:can start putting things in place for your next career while you're still employed.
Yesim Nicholson:So like I mentioned in my book, actually some companies
Yesim Nicholson:massively encourage a side hustle.
Yesim Nicholson:So companies like Google, for example, because they see that actually their
Yesim Nicholson:staff are more engaged because they're, you know, they're doing something quite
Yesim Nicholson:fulfilling outside of the outside of work.
Yesim Nicholson:So anyway, setting up some kind of side hustle or, you know, going on an evening
Yesim Nicholson:course or extra education and just exploring what you might do outside of
Yesim Nicholson:your, whatever work you're used to, your nine to five or whatever it might be.
Yesim Nicholson:And then, and then putting together a plan and that plan can be that you're going
Yesim Nicholson:to gradually phase out that your current work and end up just doing the stuff that
Yesim Nicholson:is actually meaningful to you and maybe I don't know six months time or two years
Yesim Nicholson:time, five five years time, It doesn't really matter as long as it works with
Yesim Nicholson:what you what you're aspiring for and I the other thing that I yeah, I do talk
Yesim Nicholson:about the money quite a lot in the book because it is such an important topic.
Yesim Nicholson:And the other thing is I think a lot of people who've been financially
Yesim Nicholson:successful in their careers really struggle to let go of, well, this is
Yesim Nicholson:how much I'm used to earning and I can't possibly earn less than that.
Yesim Nicholson:And I think it's quite nice to challenge that belief and to really
Yesim Nicholson:I mean you can be really, quite analytical about it and go.
Yesim Nicholson:Okay, well, what are my monthly outgoings?
Yesim Nicholson:What is the luxury?
Yesim Nicholson:What am I spending money on that?
Yesim Nicholson:Actually, probably if I didn't spend money on that it's not actually
Yesim Nicholson:going to affect my life that badly.
Yesim Nicholson:You know, I don't have to have these things that at the moment feel like
Yesim Nicholson:necessities, but actually if I drill down, they are luxuries and they don't
Yesim Nicholson:actually add that much to my life.
Yesim Nicholson:So it's really being analytical in that sense and looking at, okay, are
Yesim Nicholson:there ways that I can reduce my costs?
Yesim Nicholson:Do I have to earn the same amount?
Yesim Nicholson:And I'm I mean, people worry that they're not going to earn the same amount and then
Yesim Nicholson:other people go on to earn loads more.
Yesim Nicholson:I think people automatically assume that they're going to earn less
Yesim Nicholson:money when they make a career change.
Yesim Nicholson:And that's definitely not always the case.
Yesim Nicholson:I've got some examples in my book of people who've gone on to
Yesim Nicholson:earn much more money because that was really important to them.
Yesim Nicholson:Or,
Yesim Nicholson:I don't know, I guess sometimes it's a fluke, but, um, you
Yesim Nicholson:know, some people do put in
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): just that
Yesim Nicholson:they
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): plan
Yesim Nicholson:to make more than
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): in their
Yesim Nicholson:current position.
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): So we talked quite a bit already about the book and i've
Yesim Nicholson:started reading it I already admitted to I didn't finish just because i'm
Yesim Nicholson:a slow methodical reader who actually there are like nice activities
Yesim Nicholson:in the book and I was doing them.
Yesim Nicholson:But it's it's a it's a good read.
Yesim Nicholson:I think it's light hearted for this subject matter and the heaviness for
Yesim Nicholson:me is just comes from my own thoughts about my my career, my job, but your
Yesim Nicholson:book is called "Ready to Quit Your Job?
Yesim Nicholson:Your Guide to a Much More Fulfilling Career".
Yesim Nicholson:So it, I assume goes along with the course that you created for online, but
Yesim Nicholson:what got you to actually write the book?
Yesim Nicholson:Because so many people talk about the book, they're going to write
Yesim Nicholson:the book and they don't do it.
Yesim Nicholson:So how'd you do it?
Yesim Nicholson:Yeah, I, honestly I never thought I'd write a book.
Yesim Nicholson:It was just not on my radar at all.
Yesim Nicholson:Because I don't consider myself to be a very disciplined person.
Yesim Nicholson:And I, I definitely had this belief that in order to write a book you
Yesim Nicholson:had to be a disciplined person.
Yesim Nicholson:But this is what I love about my work, that you can challenge beliefs, right?
Yesim Nicholson:And, and I definitely had my beliefs around writing a book challenged.
Yesim Nicholson:Because I host this podcast and I was talking to all these amazing people who
Yesim Nicholson:had made career changes and then obviously conversation with clients and I don't
Yesim Nicholson:know, like all these amazing stories started to emerge and I guess in my line
Yesim Nicholson:of work, I, I am repeating myself a little bit and the same themes kept popping up.
Yesim Nicholson:And so I just started to take notes, like literally on my phone.
Yesim Nicholson:I'd have a thought and I'd be like, Oh, that's an interesting
Yesim Nicholson:thoughts and or theory or whatever.
Yesim Nicholson:And I'd just take notes.
Yesim Nicholson:And then I sort of very tentatively started writing, not really thinking
Yesim Nicholson:that I would ever finish writing it because I'm really good at starting
Yesim Nicholson:things, less good at finishing them.
Yesim Nicholson:I didn't tell anybody that I was sort of half writing a book because I'm
Yesim Nicholson:like, well, it's just another thing that not another thing, but it's going to
Yesim Nicholson:be, then people are going to be like, "Hey, what's happening with the book?"
Yesim Nicholson:And then I'll be like, "Oh yeah, nothing.
Yesim Nicholson:You know, it's, it was just a pipe dream."
Yesim Nicholson:So I really didn't tell anybody.
Yesim Nicholson:And then it was a few months in that I was chatting to a friend and he said,
Yesim Nicholson:Oh, I'm writing this book, Yesim.
Yesim Nicholson:And so I very tentatively admitted that I was sort of, maybe,
Yesim Nicholson:kind of writing a book as well.
Yesim Nicholson:And he said, well, let's hold each other accountable and make it happen.
Yesim Nicholson:I was like, yes, that sounds like a great plan.
Yesim Nicholson:And so we blocked out a certain amount of time every week where we
Yesim Nicholson:would both sit and write our books.
Yesim Nicholson:And then and then I got to like 25, 25, 000 words and I was like, well, This is
Yesim Nicholson:actually going somewhere and carving out that time is actually working and I'm just
Yesim Nicholson:going to block it out on my calendar for the next six months and see what happens.
Yesim Nicholson:And then before I knew it I had 40, 50, 60, I can't remember, like
Yesim Nicholson:several thousand words enough for a book and then I just had to put it
Yesim Nicholson:into some kind of logical or what I thought might be a logical format.
Yesim Nicholson:And then I was like, okay, this, this, there is actually something here.
Yesim Nicholson:And then I, I still was like, I don't know if this is actually any good.
Yesim Nicholson:It's kind of weird doing something in isolation like that, where you
Yesim Nicholson:don't really have anybody to be You know, I'm not bouncing off anybody.
Yesim Nicholson:Nobody's going, "Oh, this is a load of rubbish.
Yesim Nicholson:What, what, what the hell have you written?"
Yesim Nicholson:And then I sent it to a proofreader and she was the one that was like,
Yesim Nicholson:this is actually really good.
Yesim Nicholson:I was like, Oh, okay.
Yesim Nicholson:Really?
Yesim Nicholson:You, you just saying that, or, and then before I knew it, I had a book.
Yesim Nicholson:And I still sometimes look at it and go, "Oh, I actually did that."
Yesim Nicholson:And it was a really, I have to say, I really loved the process of
Yesim Nicholson:writing because it helps to solidify thoughts that you're having and and
Yesim Nicholson:then actually being able to share them with the world is really fun.
Yesim Nicholson:And I, touch wood, so far I've had really nice feedback and I know at
Yesim Nicholson:least three people have quit their jobs as a result of reading the
Yesim Nicholson:book, which is not actually the aim.
Yesim Nicholson:So there's a huge question mark on the, on the front cover of the book.
Yesim Nicholson:And it really is a question like, are you ready to quit your job?
Yesim Nicholson:I was going to call the book, are you, are you ready to quit your job?
Yesim Nicholson:And then it was too, just too long.
Yesim Nicholson:So that's why it's ready to quit your job question mark, um, because, um,
Yesim Nicholson:I don't advocate people just quitting their job willy nilly . Like, I really
Yesim Nicholson:do encourage people to put a lot of thought into it and make the right
Yesim Nicholson:decision for them at the right time.
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): I was looking at going into nonprofit.
Yesim Nicholson:I was feeling really uninspired by what I was doing.
Yesim Nicholson:And I just have this like service as such a important aspect of my life.
Yesim Nicholson:And, then, I actually talked to someone who founded a nonprofit who told me,
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah, like, think about your wellbeing long term and your livelihood and actually
Yesim Nicholson:like you can probably serve others in a better way If you continue to take care
Yesim Nicholson:of yourself in a job that pays really well and pursue nonprofit outside of
Yesim Nicholson:that and that really was eye opening because she's dedicated her life to it
Yesim Nicholson:but she also had the resources to do that.
Yesim Nicholson:And so then I realized for me, no, I wasn't ready to quit my
Yesim Nicholson:job, but I was ready to make moves to, to do other things that were
Yesim Nicholson:really important outside of work.
Yesim Nicholson:And so like, just, you know, there are the different ways of looking at it.
Yesim Nicholson:And I do think your book, for the, I read the first I'd say third and
Yesim Nicholson:first of all, I'll just give feedback and then people listening can hear
Yesim Nicholson:it too, but what I think is first of all, your personality shines through,
Yesim Nicholson:which is great because you're bright and encouraging, but also very smart.
Yesim Nicholson:And like fact-based so it's cool.
Yesim Nicholson:And you've developed these ideas of what you can quickly identify, like
Yesim Nicholson:what kind of where you are in this "are you ready to quit your job?"
Yesim Nicholson:journey.
Yesim Nicholson:But then also like your anecdotes are really good.
Yesim Nicholson:And the quotes are really good.
Yesim Nicholson:So I think it's a good mix of like your text, other people's stories and quotes.
Yesim Nicholson:And I just think it works really well.
Yesim Nicholson:So I would say congratulations.
Yesim Nicholson:I think it's an awesome book and I am enjoying reading it.
Yesim Nicholson:That's so nice.
Yesim Nicholson:I don't know why, but it never gets old hearing people say
Yesim Nicholson:nice things about your work.
Yesim Nicholson:It's, it thank you for saying
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): that.
Yesim Nicholson:So this passage really struck me and it's near the front of the book.
Yesim Nicholson:But it was "whether they're conscious of it or not, most people seek
Yesim Nicholson:meaning, control and fun work.
Yesim Nicholson:Why?
Yesim Nicholson:Because when your job aligns with your passions, values, and
Yesim Nicholson:interests, something magical happens.
Yesim Nicholson:Your job becomes more than a means to earn a living.
Yesim Nicholson:It becomes a constant source of inspiration, purpose,
Yesim Nicholson:positive energy, and joy.
Yesim Nicholson:Please show me someone who doesn't want that in their life."
Yesim Nicholson:And I really, that resonated with me because you can't always get that out of
Yesim Nicholson:your work, but you can get it somewhere.
Yesim Nicholson:And, but, if you can, you should get it out of your work.
Yesim Nicholson:And do you, do you identify with this more now than you used to?
Yesim Nicholson:Or is it something you realized earlier in your career?
Yesim Nicholson:Or is it something that came through working with people, I guess?
Yesim Nicholson:Oh, I love this question.
Yesim Nicholson:I've not been asked this question before.
Yesim Nicholson:Do you know, I've always had a sense that you should just enjoy what you love to do.
Yesim Nicholson:And there's a story that I tell, I think I tell it in the book quite early on.
Yesim Nicholson:That very early on in my career, I had this fear that I was, I had this really
Yesim Nicholson:clear vision of being at a dinner party with lots of fascinating people and
Yesim Nicholson:the person next to me turns to me and says what have you done with your life?
Yesim Nicholson:You know, when I'm in my seventies, eighties, whatever.
Yesim Nicholson:And my biggest fear was that I would turn around and go, I worked for
Yesim Nicholson:this big multinational all my life.
Yesim Nicholson:I wanted to be able to say, do you know what I did this, and I tried
Yesim Nicholson:that, and I failed at this and I succeeded at that, and bloody
Yesim Nicholson:hell, it was a fast, fabulous ride.
Yesim Nicholson:That's what I wanted to be able to say.
Yesim Nicholson:And I, I really had this.
Yesim Nicholson:very early on in my career, like early twenties.
Yesim Nicholson:And I think having that fear has been the driver for me to always find,
Yesim Nicholson:not just in my career, but I, I just having have a life that is like,
Yesim Nicholson:yeah, this is, this is awesome.
Yesim Nicholson:And obviously your work is such a big part for me, for sure.
Yesim Nicholson:Like I, I, you know, I've got two kids and I guess potentially
Yesim Nicholson:I could be a stay at home mum.
Yesim Nicholson:but that
Yesim Nicholson:just never appealed.
Yesim Nicholson:I, I love work.
Yesim Nicholson:I, love the challenge of it.
Yesim Nicholson:I love the people aspect of it.
Yesim Nicholson:I love learning new stuff.
Yesim Nicholson:so yes, that's a very, very long answer to a very short question.
Yesim Nicholson:Yes.
Yesim Nicholson:It's been very deliberate.
Yesim Nicholson:(laughter)
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): I think it is so important.
Yesim Nicholson:I think your kids will see that too.
Yesim Nicholson:They'll see this example at some point that, okay, mom was doing this and then
Yesim Nicholson:she was able to build this thing her own.
Yesim Nicholson:my parents had an auto repair shop and my mom will sometimes put herself down
Yesim Nicholson:about that because it wasn't some it or corporate thing, but I actually admire
Yesim Nicholson:that my parents had their own business.
Yesim Nicholson:And it was a service business and it was a business that they worked really
Yesim Nicholson:hard at and they, you know, were able to raise a family and have a house
Yesim Nicholson:and everything with this business.
Yesim Nicholson:And so,
Yesim Nicholson:the kids are always watching, you know, and, and seeing that.
Yesim Nicholson:And I think that
Yesim Nicholson:also prestige of the job isn't that important a lot of the
Yesim Nicholson:time to other people as it is to
Yesim Nicholson:yourself, you know, and, and that kind of thing.
Yesim Nicholson:But being more satisfied in it is, I
Yesim Nicholson:think.
Yesim Nicholson:Yeah, I agree.
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): You become a better coworker too, you know,
Yesim Nicholson:I think I'm a better mum because of my work.
Yesim Nicholson:if that makes sense, because I, I'm more fulfilled as a human being.
Yesim Nicholson:And I'm not saying everybody, you know, everybody has to work at all, you know,
Yesim Nicholson:some people are really happy being stay at home parents, and that's awesome.
Yesim Nicholson:But for me, I
Yesim Nicholson:know that I'm much happier when I'm, you know, doing something that's meaningful to
Yesim Nicholson:me and you're right, your kids see that.
Yesim Nicholson:They see whether you're happy or not.
Yesim Nicholson:So hopefully I'm setting a good We'll see We'll give it a few
Yesim Nicholson:years and then we'll judge.
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): Yeah, well in the state on parents to like that's,
Yesim Nicholson:you know, a privilege to be able to have a one income household because
Yesim Nicholson:not the reality for a lot people now.
Yesim Nicholson:I think the people who
Yesim Nicholson:do end up doing that, like they're working in job that's really tough.
Yesim Nicholson:And there's a lot of women who are trying to go back
Yesim Nicholson:to work after, Staying home for X amount of time with their kids and worried that
Yesim Nicholson:they're losing something in their career.
Yesim Nicholson:But it's like, well, you're having to do a lot like I, you know, I don't
Yesim Nicholson:have kids and I think that is a good decision ultimately for me, at least
Yesim Nicholson:alone, maybe with someone else that would have been different, but alone.
Yesim Nicholson:Yeah.
Yesim Nicholson:Because I can't imagine trying to balance everything that parents do and
Yesim Nicholson:getting, just getting people out the door, like getting me out the door.
Yesim Nicholson:Like I like my mom here to get me out the door some days.
Yesim Nicholson:You know, or get me ready for the podcast.
Yesim Nicholson:Robbie you have a recording.
Yesim Nicholson:Why are you still sitting around?
Yesim Nicholson:I don't know I don't know mom, you know, because it's gonna be on things all audio.
Yesim Nicholson:Is there a job in your past that you just wish you hadn't spent your time
Yesim Nicholson:at, or how do you feel about that?
Yesim Nicholson:I don't think so.
Yesim Nicholson:I mean, I'm not somebody that sits and sort of dissects stuff that I've done
Yesim Nicholson:anyway, generally speaking, but I think if I did dissect it, you know, I, I really.
Yesim Nicholson:This is maybe a bit of a weird thing to say, but I just don't know if there is
Yesim Nicholson:such a thing as a waste of time, because I think you learn something from everything.
Yesim Nicholson:And so it might not be the best use of your time, but I don't
Yesim Nicholson:know if it's ever a waste.
Yesim Nicholson:And so I think everything that I've done in my career to date
Yesim Nicholson:has taught me something, you know, consciously or subconsciously that
Yesim Nicholson:I bring to what I'm doing now.
Yesim Nicholson:So, yeah, I, I don't know if I'd change anything because I think every,
Yesim Nicholson:every job that you do teaches you or shows you things that you enjoy doing
Yesim Nicholson:and things you don't enjoy doing.
Yesim Nicholson:And you, you know, you get exposed to different personalities
Yesim Nicholson:and different environments.
Yesim Nicholson:And there's lessons in all of those like, "Oh, actually, I really don't
Yesim Nicholson:like being in a very busy office."
Yesim Nicholson:Or "actually, I don't like being by myself for too long."
Yesim Nicholson:Or, "I really like working with people who energize me," or, "I really like people
Yesim Nicholson:who just shut up and get their work done."
Yesim Nicholson:Like it's really like literally everything that you do sort of if you do take a
Yesim Nicholson:bit of time to reflect on and this is something that I do in my coaching is
Yesim Nicholson:really look at you know what are the things in your current work that drain
Yesim Nicholson:you of energy and what are the things that fill you with energy because theirs clues
Yesim Nicholson:all day every day as to what you know you we should be doing more of and less of.
Yesim Nicholson:All the time.
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): yeah, that's a great point, and yeah,
Yesim Nicholson:just learning and finding out.
Yesim Nicholson:I think it is important to know what you don't like and what you
Yesim Nicholson:do like too because sometimes you focus on one or the other, but
Yesim Nicholson:it's powerful to know what want.
Yesim Nicholson:So you can go after that.
Yesim Nicholson:And actually, you know, a huge majority of people I work with get
Yesim Nicholson:to a point in their careers where they are only focusing on the negative and
Yesim Nicholson:they've, they stopped seeing the positive.
Yesim Nicholson:And it might seem counter intuitive to do this, but the first thing we do do
Yesim Nicholson:is start looking for the things that they do enjoy in their current job.
Yesim Nicholson:Because there, there will be stuff.
Yesim Nicholson:You know, it's very rare that somebody says, I hate a hundred
Yesim Nicholson:percent of what I'm doing.
Yesim Nicholson:\ There'll be elements of, of things that they do enjoy.
Yesim Nicholson:I've had a couple of people who say I, because they, I get them to keep a diary
Yesim Nicholson:of stuff that they've really enjoyed that day, what energized them, et cetera.
Yesim Nicholson:And I have had one or two people that have done it for a week
Yesim Nicholson:and come back and go, there was
Yesim Nicholson:literally nothing,
Yesim Nicholson:nothing.
Yesim Nicholson:And I, and I think that's really, really sad.
Yesim Nicholson:So, so then we definitely,
Yesim Nicholson:you know we need to, make changes quite quickly because my life's too
Yesim Nicholson:short to be going through your days finding zero joy in what you're doing.
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): Oh, a hundred percent.
Yesim Nicholson:Yeah, totally.
Yesim Nicholson:Yeah.
Yesim Nicholson:That's rough.
Yesim Nicholson:I mean, that's rough to hear feel.
Yesim Nicholson:So, your podcast, let's just, I mean, I know I love having a podcast mostly
Yesim Nicholson:because of the conversations, right.
Yesim Nicholson:And, and who I get to talk to and co what's your, give
Yesim Nicholson:the name of your podcast and,
Yesim Nicholson:I have the best guess, you know, as you know, it's
Yesim Nicholson:called Your Big Career Move.
Yesim Nicholson:And you know, it's where, where you can find most podcasts, so
Yesim Nicholson:Spotify, Apple YouTube, et cetera.
Yesim Nicholson:And, yeah.
Yesim Nicholson:I don't know, I just love chatting with people, I love having these conversations
Yesim Nicholson:like the ones we're having now.
Yesim Nicholson:And because I was meeting really quite fascinating people who had amazing career
Yesim Nicholson:change stories to tell, I was like, well, I really want to showcase these stories.
Yesim Nicholson:So I, I think I've only done one or two episodes where it's just me
Yesim Nicholson:talking because I find it boring.
Yesim Nicholson:I've been encouraged to do more of it
Yesim Nicholson:so.
Yesim Nicholson:maybe at some point, but what I really love about the podcast is having
Yesim Nicholson:conversations with people and finding out what, you know, what led to their career
Yesim Nicholson:change, how they made the transition, who was part of the journey, what they've
Yesim Nicholson:learned about themselves and the process.
Yesim Nicholson:And the idea is that hopefully there's, there are people out there listening who
Yesim Nicholson:are thinking about making some change to their career because they're unhappy
Yesim Nicholson:and then being inspired by something that they've heard and making a change.
Yesim Nicholson:And that's why I love sharing your story because actually you're the
Yesim Nicholson:perfect example of a toe dipper.
Yesim Nicholson:So a toe dipper is somebody who is in a full time job, who actually quite
Yesim Nicholson:likes what they do, but knows that there's something outside of their
Yesim Nicholson:current career that they, there's a part of them that they want to fulfill.
Yesim Nicholson:And you do that so beautifully, not just with your comedy,
Yesim Nicholson:but also your volunteer work.
Yesim Nicholson:So I was really, I was so happy that you agreed to be on the because you're like
Yesim Nicholson:the, for, people they'll dippers out you.
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): Yeah, I no, I just, I feel lucky that
Yesim Nicholson:don't know that I just kind of have the, whatever it is that says just go
Yesim Nicholson:try it, you know, um, because I think it's, that's big battle They think of
Yesim Nicholson:things, search things on the internet.
Yesim Nicholson:They'll maybe put something on their calendar and then they just won't go.
Yesim Nicholson:And I think that's the thing.
Yesim Nicholson:It's like, just go.
Yesim Nicholson:Cause the worst you did, I mean, you probably would have been sitting around
Yesim Nicholson:thinking about, I should have gone.
Yesim Nicholson:So just go, if it doesn't work out, then, you know, but I hate, I hate not knowing
Yesim Nicholson:the answer to things in a way questions, you know, that I can answer like that.
Yesim Nicholson:I mean, other questions I'm not going to answer, but that one,
Yesim Nicholson:like, should I go to this thing?
Yesim Nicholson:Yes.
Yesim Nicholson:Go see how it is.
Yesim Nicholson:Oh, it was awful.
Yesim Nicholson:Don't go.
Yesim Nicholson:Yeah.
Yesim Nicholson:It was great.
Yesim Nicholson:Go again, you know, but Yeah.
Yesim Nicholson:Totally.
Yesim Nicholson:Just try
Yesim Nicholson:it out.
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): and then see, and you can't know, I mean, even like you think
Yesim Nicholson:you dream job, but sometimes it's not.
Yesim Nicholson:And if you can do things in a low risk way that doesn't cost much and take much time.
Yesim Nicholson:I don't know.
Yesim Nicholson:It's just in a way.
Yesim Nicholson:It's kind of like, yeah, take advantage of that opportunity.
Yesim Nicholson:Yeah.
Yesim Nicholson:Yeah, but I think you're quite unique in that respect.
Yesim Nicholson:I think there are, you know, there are quite a lot of people who are so used
Yesim Nicholson:to get up, go to work, come home, eat, sleep, repeat, that it feels like a
Yesim Nicholson:huge stretch to do anything different out of their ordinary existence.
Yesim Nicholson:And so it's just, it's starting to break habits that we've got into
Yesim Nicholson:breaking cycles that we've got into.
Yesim Nicholson:And, you know,
Yesim Nicholson:even just driving to work a you know, just to spark us And um, but it's, it's,
Yesim Nicholson:some people have to be encouraged, very, very, you know, friendly encouragements
Yesim Nicholson:to, to, do something a little bit
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): So we have our podcasts and if they listen to
Yesim Nicholson:them, they'll the encouragement.
Yesim Nicholson:I know so far, I know there are at least three people who
Yesim Nicholson:have quit their job as a result of reading the book, but I was talking
Yesim Nicholson:to somebody the other day and they said, we all needa tipping point.
Yesim Nicholson:There is a tipping point for people who make big changes and that tipping point
Yesim Nicholson:can be, you know, bad health or it can be you know, somebody gives you that shove.
Yesim Nicholson:You know, well, it can be being dismissed from your job.
Yesim Nicholson:You know, like it can be such a variety of things.
Yesim Nicholson:And sometimes it is something like reading a book or hearing a podcast or something
Yesim Nicholson:that just you've been sitting on that fence and then it's just that final, okay,
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): Yeah, and it feels sudden, but it
Yesim Nicholson:was kind of there a long time
Yesim Nicholson:One thing you mentioned that I think is really important is around health.
Yesim Nicholson:Cause people will have either major their life, or, you know, we discussed,
Yesim Nicholson:I have a chronic illness that's kind changed my perspective on life, or
Yesim Nicholson:maybe even a parent ill or something happens that really just kind of
Yesim Nicholson:makes jars and says, oh, this for me.
Yesim Nicholson:So.
Yesim Nicholson:How do you just a little bit more about how do you think health
Yesim Nicholson:plays a role in all of all of it?
Yesim Nicholson:Yeah, I mean, I think good health is sort of a
Yesim Nicholson:prerequisite for making a good decision.
Yesim Nicholson:So like I said, like the, you know, the work that I do is really to help people
Yesim Nicholson:make a very big decision that's going to have an impact on people's health.
Yesim Nicholson:Pretty much every area of their life.
Yesim Nicholson:I mean, it's very rare that a big career change isn't going to affect,
Yesim Nicholson:you know, your relationships, your financial status, et cetera, et cetera.
Yesim Nicholson:And so it's something that I absolutely advocate spending time over and
Yesim Nicholson:being in the right frame of mind.
Yesim Nicholson:And your health.
Yesim Nicholson:massively plays into that.
Yesim Nicholson:I think if you're in chronic pain, or you're not sleeping well, or you're
Yesim Nicholson:feeling sluggish because you're not eating the right foods, etc,
Yesim Nicholson:then that can cloud your judgment.
Yesim Nicholson:And I, and I have seen people make poor decisions.
Yesim Nicholson:Based, you know, based purely on the fact that they aren't thinking straight,
Yesim Nicholson:which I don't mean for that to sound patronizing, but it's hard to think
Yesim Nicholson:straight when you haven't slept well, when you've been feeding yourself a
Yesim Nicholson:load of rubbish food, when you haven't exercised, et cetera, et cetera.
Yesim Nicholson:And so I, you know, I, I cover all these topics in my book.
Yesim Nicholson:And I think sometimes people are like, well, what's sleep got to do, for
Yesim Nicholson:example, you know, with, with courage.
Yesim Nicholson:And I'm like, well, Like, when's the last time you made a really good decision
Yesim Nicholson:on after a really bad night's sleep?
Yesim Nicholson:Like, we should be looking after ourselves really, really well.
Yesim Nicholson:And that's why I think some people go through this whole process, you
Yesim Nicholson:know, whether it's reading the book or coaching or whatever, and then
Yesim Nicholson:they realize that, like, they start to look after themselves better.
Yesim Nicholson:And they have a change in mindset.
Yesim Nicholson:And that, that's why they then become better people.
Yesim Nicholson:Remainer as I call them.
Yesim Nicholson:It's somebody that goes through the process, goes through the
Yesim Nicholson:motions and decides ultimately that they're in the right place.
Yesim Nicholson:They, they are working for an organization that they actually quite like.
Yesim Nicholson:They like their colleagues.
Yesim Nicholson:Their boss isn't too bad at all.
Yesim Nicholson:They're earning good money, et cetera.
Yesim Nicholson:Like it's ticking all the right boxes, but they were feeling
Yesim Nicholson:negative about their work
Yesim Nicholson:because you know, they were tired or they were stressed out or whatever.
Yesim Nicholson:And just by going through this, process of self-reflection, they come to the
Yesim Nicholson:realization be of is working for me.
Yesim Nicholson:I just needed to have a slight mindset shift and a, a new appreciation,
Yesim Nicholson:I suppose, of the situation I'm
Yesim Nicholson:in.
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): yeah, no, that's a good point.
Yesim Nicholson:And yeah, you're right.
Yesim Nicholson:I mean people when you don't sleep Well, you're just you're emotionally
Yesim Nicholson:not gonna be where you want to for this kind emotional decision, right?
Yesim Nicholson:yeah.
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): So we're gonna get into the last part, which is
Yesim Nicholson:the Fun Five It's five question to ask everyone But first I like to
Yesim Nicholson:ask every guest like do you have any advice or mantra you want to share
Yesim Nicholson:that you just kind of follow that's important to you when you have a
Yesim Nicholson:conversation to share with people?
Yesim Nicholson:I don't know if I have a mantra.
Yesim Nicholson:I just, I every I just, But this is just for me, you know, I just think life
Yesim Nicholson:is for living and you should Do what makes you happy, and, and then that has
Yesim Nicholson:a ripple effect on everybody around you.
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): So now we'll get into the fun five.
Yesim Nicholson:So five questions.
Yesim Nicholson:I ask guest.
Yesim Nicholson:The first one what is the oldest t shirt you have and still wear?
Yesim Nicholson:Can I just say that I love these questions, and I'm
Yesim Nicholson:really glad that you're asking them.
Yesim Nicholson:But here's, here is some life advice, okay?
Yesim Nicholson:Don't read your emails before you go to sleep.
Yesim Nicholson:So, I made the stupid, stupid, rookie mistake of reading my emails just
Yesim Nicholson:before I went to sleep last night.
Yesim Nicholson:And you'd very kindly sent me through these fascinating questions.
Yesim Nicholson:So, speaking, speaking of sleep I mean, I blame you for me going to
Yesim Nicholson:sleep way too late last night, because then I literally couldn't switch off.
Yesim Nicholson:I was like, these are really great questions, but oh my
Yesim Nicholson:god, what am I gonna say?
Yesim Nicholson:So I'm just pulling your leg, obviously.
Yesim Nicholson:But it did make me, it did take me longer than, it takes me about three
Yesim Nicholson:seconds normally to fall, fall asleep.
Yesim Nicholson:It took me a good minute last night.
Yesim Nicholson:So the t shirt, my oldest t shirt, I think is a t shirt that I bought
Yesim Nicholson:in Italy on holiday about 10 years ago and I really love this t shirt.
Yesim Nicholson:It's nothing special actually, but I don't know, I just really like the way it fits.
Yesim Nicholson:I like the way it looks.
Yesim Nicholson:And It's ancient, it's got holes in it, it's kind of crusty under the arms.
Yesim Nicholson:It's not, I mean, it's not, if you look at it closely, it's not a good
Yesim Nicholson:t shirt, but I love wearing it.
Yesim Nicholson:So I, it's one of those that
Yesim Nicholson:I thinking I should probably get rid of and then I get really the
Yesim Nicholson:then I go, I'll just, it's clean.
Yesim Nicholson:I might as well wear it one more time.
Yesim Nicholson:And then it goes back in the washing basket then before I know it's in
Yesim Nicholson:my drawer again.
Yesim Nicholson:And then I, you know, it's kind of on repeat.
Yesim Nicholson:So I still own it and I still wear it I just
Yesim Nicholson:tuck in the bits that have holes
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): Exactly.
Yesim Nicholson:Yeah.
Yesim Nicholson:What else are we supposed to do?
Yesim Nicholson:Um, okay.
Yesim Nicholson:So this one I like because I love
Yesim Nicholson:film Groundhog's Day, and music, but if every day was Groundhog's Day, in
Yesim Nicholson:the film where he wakes up, Bill Murray wakes up to his alarm clock playing same
Yesim Nicholson:song every single day, what song would you choose for your alarm clock to play?
Yesim Nicholson:There's a song, there's a Turkish song and the lyrics are you
Yesim Nicholson:know, translated something about,
Yesim Nicholson:um, waking up to my mother's voice that's just popped into my head and I'm like,
Yesim Nicholson:oh, that's actually quite nice, isn't it?
Yesim Nicholson:Wouldn't it be nice if I just had my mom whispering in my ear,
Yesim Nicholson:hey, Yesim, it's time to wake up.
Yesim Nicholson:It's by a singer called Sertab Erener who's my my favorite Turkish singer?
Yesim Nicholson:and I can't think what the name of the song is right now, but I can send it
Yesim Nicholson:to you later It's a very sweet song.
Rabiah:Good.
Rabiah:Rabiah Coon (Host): All right then this one.
Rabiah:Coffee or tea or neither?
Yesim Nicholson:Or both?
Rabiah:Yeah.
Rabiah:You know,
Yesim Nicholson:Is that an option?
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): Yeah, it is.
Yesim Nicholson:Yeah, tea and coffee equally.
Yesim Nicholson:I it makes
Yesim Nicholson:I only have one of each a day because I get heart palpitations otherwise.
Yesim Nicholson:Um, but I love, a good cup of coffee and I love a good cup of tea and they
Yesim Nicholson:taste so much better when somebody else has made them for you as well.
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): that's true.
Yesim Nicholson:Um, can you think of a time that you, like laughed so hard
Yesim Nicholson:you cried, or just something
Yesim Nicholson:that when you think about it makes you laugh?
Yesim Nicholson:Yeah.
Yesim Nicholson:I mean I, you might have noticed I laugh a lot.
Yesim Nicholson:I also cry, I cry at everything, like I cry at adverts, you
Yesim Nicholson:know, like really ridiculous.
Yesim Nicholson:Um, do laugh a lot, and actually I was talking to my husband about
Yesim Nicholson:this the other day, I was like, you know what, when did we last
Yesim Nicholson:like properly laugh together, like.
Yesim Nicholson:He makes me laugh every day.
Yesim Nicholson:He's a very funny man.
Yesim Nicholson:My children make me laugh every day.
Yesim Nicholson:I'm lucky that I've got lots of friends who make me laugh every day.
Yesim Nicholson:I make myself laugh with, like, not because I'm funny, just
Yesim Nicholson:because I'm stupid sometimes.
Yesim Nicholson:Um, But there, there is a TV program that for both of us sprang to mind
Yesim Nicholson:that we have been in stitches uh, which is called "Life in Pieces".
Yesim Nicholson:and I can't, it's an American sitcom y thing.
Yesim Nicholson:Tom Hanks son, son is And there's a, there's a character in that,
Yesim Nicholson:and I don't know his name, he plays the bald, tall bald guy.
Yesim Nicholson:And he just comes out with the funniest lines that I, I, we've literally been
Yesim Nicholson:like, you know, that uncontrollable laughter, and it's just ridiculous.
Yesim Nicholson:And then one of us will finish laughing and
Yesim Nicholson:then set the other one off again.
Yesim Nicholson:and, you know, you know that, when we just keep like, each other.
Yesim Nicholson:But Yeah.
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): Um, all right.
Yesim Nicholson:So the last question, who inspires you right now?
Yesim Nicholson:I'm really stuck on this, Rabiah.
Yesim Nicholson:Like, I really don't know, because I think, I think my brain is trying
Yesim Nicholson:to find one person that inspires me.
Yesim Nicholson:And I think the truth is that I am inspired by different things
Yesim Nicholson:that I see other people doing or saying and so it's really hard
Yesim Nicholson:for me to just pinpoint one person.
Yesim Nicholson:I think I'm inspired by stuff that I see all the time by, you
Yesim Nicholson:know, lots of different people.
Yesim Nicholson:Like even my children, you know, they inspire me.
Yesim Nicholson:So, yeah, I, I, I really struggled with this question and I, I, you know,
Yesim Nicholson:I'm gonna be a complete cop out and say there aren't one or two people
Yesim Nicholson:that immediately spring to mind.
Yesim Nicholson:It's just a plethora of, of, things that I see and here.
Rabiah:that's
Rabiah:Rabiah Coon (Host): a nice view of the world, you know?
Yesim Nicholson:I hope so.
Yesim Nicholson:Did you, were you hoping I'd say like Donald Trump or something?
Yesim Nicholson:Like just, just one person?
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): it was, you, did he read your, I don't
Yesim Nicholson:think he could read your book.
Yesim Nicholson:but I was gonna say, maybe he read your book and decided he
Yesim Nicholson:wanted to change his career.
Yesim Nicholson:That's why he did.
Yesim Nicholson:you never know.
Yesim Nicholson:You never know.
Yesim Nicholson:You never know,
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): different.
Yesim Nicholson:he does actually get a
Yesim Nicholson:mention in my
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): much other like
Yesim Nicholson:yet.
Yesim Nicholson:So you'll, you'll have to feedback when you get to that bit.
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): And I can't burn the book because it's on my kindle.
Yesim Nicholson:So am I gonna do do?
Yesim Nicholson:Send you a, hard copy, for the satisfaction.
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): [laughter] he he had
Yesim Nicholson:a
Yesim Nicholson:different career before and it was just different anyway, it's, that's too much.
Yesim Nicholson:That's a whole I was, I was thinking about that actually.
Yesim Nicholson:Like, Oh, do I start on just things I don't like and me them.
Yesim Nicholson:then think it just turned into a podcast about him and it go very well yeah
Yesim Nicholson:just a
Yesim Nicholson:one
Yesim Nicholson:way street.
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): Yeah.
Yesim Nicholson:The reason I talk about him, and feel free to edit this out, is
Yesim Nicholson:that I find Trump interesting in that he comes across as so sure of himself.
Yesim Nicholson:And I think sometimes we could all do with a dose of that
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): Sure.
Yesim Nicholson:That I agree with.
Yesim Nicholson:And I, think we, we all suffer from, you know, whether
Yesim Nicholson:you want to call it imposter syndrome or just lack of confidence, like
Yesim Nicholson:we've all experienced what that feels like at some point in our lives.
Yesim Nicholson:And I think when you're making a big decision, like that's really going to
Yesim Nicholson:affect your life to feel confident.
Yesim Nicholson:You want to feel like you're making the right decision.
Yesim Nicholson:And, and so I do talk about channeling your inner Trump, which is kind of
Yesim Nicholson:like the extreme version, right?
Yesim Nicholson:The like almost deluded self belief.
Yesim Nicholson:I, do say in the book, obviously some people are massively
Yesim Nicholson:offended just by hearing his name.
Yesim Nicholson:So if Trump you know is going to offend you just think of somebody else who's
Yesim Nicholson:really confident and at least seems to have this unlimited amount of self belief
Yesim Nicholson:and just channel that Because it does work
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): Yeah.
Yesim Nicholson:It's a metaphor.
Yesim Nicholson:Donald Trump..
Yesim Nicholson:Awesome.
Yesim Nicholson:Um,
Yesim Nicholson:so if people want to look you up either for coaching or your podcast or your
Yesim Nicholson:book, where do you want them to find you.
Yesim Nicholson:And of course I'll put links in the show notes
Yesim Nicholson:Thank you.
Yesim Nicholson:Well, I think I'm the only Yesim Nicholson in the world.
Yesim Nicholson:Uh, my name is spelled Y E S I M and my website is
Yesim Nicholson:YesCareerCoaching.
Yesim Nicholson:I think we mentioned the podcast is Your Big Career Move and the book is
Yesim Nicholson:called "Ready to Quit Your Job?", and it's available on Amazon worldwide.
Yesim Nicholson:So, yeah, and I am probably most active on LinkedIn if anybody wants
Yesim Nicholson:to connect with me on social media.
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): Awesome.
Yesim Nicholson:Well, you, Yesim.
Yesim Nicholson:This has been a lot of fun, and it was good to learn about you this time.
Yesim Nicholson:Thank you, thanks for having me.
Yesim Nicholson:We know everything about each other now, that's it.
Yesim Nicholson:There's nothing more to know.
Yesim Nicholson:Rabiah Coon (Host): there isn't.
Yesim Nicholson:I know.
Yesim Nicholson:that's, we've, we've achieved it,
Speaker 2 00:45:26
You can learn more about the guest and what was
Speaker 2 00:45:27
talked about in the show notes.
Speaker 2 00:45:29
Joe Maffia created the music you're listening to.
Speaker 2 00:45:31
You can find him on Spotify at Joe M A F F I A.
Speaker 2 00:45:36
Rob Metey does all the design, for which I am so grateful.
Speaker 2 00:45:39
You can find him online by searching Rob M-E-T-K-E.
Speaker 2 00:45:44
Please leave a review if you like the show and get in touch if you
Speaker 2 00:45:46
have feedback or guest ideas.
Speaker 2 00:45:48
The pod is on all the social channels at At More Than Work Pod (@morethanworkpod)
Speaker 2 00:45:52
or at Rabiah Comedy(@rabiahcomedy) on TikTok . While being kind to others,
Speaker 2 00:45:55
don't forget to be kind to yourself.