Can you distinguish your calling from your ego?

Recently, I came across this article written by Shelley Prevost in Inc. magazine and thought it made some interesting distinctions about what drives some peoples’ egos and how they may believe it is actually their calling in life. The article reminded me of some individuals I know in their late forties and early fifties who are dissatisfied with their careers, perhaps blaming it on the company that they work for or a supervisor. Perhaps their career path was really driven by their ego and was simply not their calling after all. The article gave me pause. Which have you been driven by: your ego or a calling to lead the life you are living? Are you satisfied? I love the quote in the article by author Frederick Buechner; he says that your calling is “the place where your deep gladness meets the world’s deep need.” It is spot on!

5 Ways to Distinguish Your Calling From Your Ego

By Shelley Prevost

Do you have a real vocation for what you’re doing, or are you just in business for egoistic reasons? Here’s how to tell which one is guiding you.

Your ego and your “calling” in life can look surprisingly similar. Both pull you toward the realization of your desires. Both can completely consume your waking (and sometimes sleeping) hours with frenetic thoughts and sparks of brilliance. They can also manifest very similar outcomes–money, fame, and power. And they can both leave you feeling exhausted.

Ego is necessary and important because it does the work to assemble your personality. It manages your fragile identity while you figure out who you are. It protects you from the onslaught of societal expectations and motivates you to work hard and achieve great things.

But ego alone can also skew you toward thinking that hard work and achievement are the goals in life.

If your ego is what assembles your personality and manages your identity, then your calling is invested in making sure it’s authentic–who you really are–not just a persona you show the world.

Here are some ways to decipher which one is really driving your work.

Ego fears not having or doing something. Calling fears not expressing or being something.

The lifeblood of the ego is fear. Its primary function is to preserve your identity, but it fears your unworthiness. As a result, ego pushes you harder in order to achieve more. Ego communicates to you through “oughts,” “musts,” and “shoulds,” persuading you to believe that by achieving more and more, you must be worthy, right?

A calling expresses itself quietly, through the expression of subtle clues throughout your life. It is unconcerned with you attaining or accomplishing anything. Its primary function is to be a conduit for expressing your true self to the world. What you DO with that expression is less important.

Ego needs anxiety to survive. Calling needs silence to survive.

Ego not only breeds on anxiety, it requires anxiety in order to decide which aspects of your personality will be dominant, and which ones will be dormant.

Wherever you feel the most insecurity is where your ego will work overtime to “fix.” The ego needs anxiety to pinpoint the problem, then course corrects by disavowing this pesky aspect of your personality. Unfortunately, what the ego finds annoying or disruptive can also be your greatest gift to the world.

A calling, on the other hand, is discovered through observation and reflection, which is rarely found in a noisy environment. Listening to your life and discovering what it’s asking of you is your calling and it requires more silence than most of us are comfortable with.

Ego manifests as burnout. Calling manifests as fulfillment.

My favorite definition of burnout is this: burnout is not about giving too much of yourself, it’s about trying to give what you do not possess.

Ego ends in burnout because it’s consuming resources you don’t have in order to push you toward a bigger, better version of yourself.

Because a calling is an expression of your true nature, it can only end in fulfillment. You know that feeling of deep satisfaction when you’re doing something you absolutely love, that’s an aspect of your calling showing itself to you.

Ego focuses on the result. Calling focuses on the process.

Because ego wants to manage anxiety by achieving more, it is especially concerned with the results of all this striving. By focusing on the outcome, your ego gets validation that all this work is worth it. Without a satisfactory result, all the striving is pointless.

A calling reveals itself through self-discovery. Your calling comes from within and can only be revealed by paying attention to how your life is unfolding. Instead of managing the outcome, your calling can handle the stress of ambiguity. It knows that the tension is revealing something that you couldn’t otherwise learn.

Ego wants to preserve the self. Calling wants to impact others.

Ego is concerned with the self and preserving what it wants. The ego may be interested in helping others. But it isn’t inherently motivated by serving others. It is motivated by maintaining and managing your identity.

A calling might begin with the expression of the self, but it moves toward the needs of others. Author Frederick Buechner says that your calling is “the place where your deep gladness meets the world’s deep need.”

While your ego does a necessary job of helping you function in the world, it is your calling that creates a more authentic, soulful way to be in the world.

For the complete article: 5 Ways to Distinguish Your Calling From Your Ego By Shelley Prevost

What’s This World Coming To?

Here’s some interesting  insights from Mike Biltonen (my darling husband), about the state of the planet we all share. Mike is a passionate fruit farmer and serious about local food security.

I love Earth. I mean I really love this bright blue shiny ball of currently semi-inhabitable soil, water, and air. But it’s going to Hell in a hand-basket faster than I can say Fukushima.

Food. We produce more food for more people than we ever have in the history of, well, time. Yet, we still have starving people all over the globe (including your own backyard) and can’t seem to get them the food they so dearly need to just make it to tomorrow. We commit massive amounts of acreage across the globe to the production of soybeans, corn, and other “commodities” so we can grow animals to feed people cheap hamburgers at McDeath. If we commited this acreage growing vegetables and fruits, we could so easily alleviate global warming and starvation in one fell swoop. Of course, getting the food to the people that are starving would require an act of compassion from the so-called Powers to make sure the food could actually get to where it needs to go. Meanwhile, we’re criminalizing the production of food in our frontyards because gardens can’t be mowed.

Water. There are only a few things that living organisms need in order survive, fresh water is one of them. Yet, we seem to keep shitting in our bed to collect a few scheckles from the, a-hem, Powers that be. Fracking is a global disaster. It is a disaster that is more frightening than pesticide and fertilizer runoff into creeks and rivers; more frightening than the depletion of the once massive aquifers; more frightening than the pollution that occurs in oceans and seas. BP? Fukushima? They’re nothing compared to the companies you’ve never heard of – Apache, Devon, Cabot, Range Resources – that are building the equivalent of many Fukushimas across the face of North America. Thanks goodness that many nations are outlawing fracking. But here in the good old US, money talks and bullshit walks – welcome to the new world order (once, GWB never really knew what he was talking about). Why with all of renewable alternatives we have access to would anyone (and, yes, I am talking to you) allow fracking to even be a topic of conversation today?

Air. You thought we solved air pollution with the Clean Air Act? Well, we got rid of the smog that riddled many of this country’s big cities, that’s for sure. But the real danger lies in what we can’t see. We left fracking above, so let’s just start right back up there. Not only does fracking destroy your water, it’ll destroy the air you breathe too. Again, there’s only so much of that wonderful stuff you suck into your lungs thousands of times each day, why muck it up? But the assault on air quality only starts there, it doesn’t end anywhere soon. If you’ve seen pictures of major Chinese cities you’ve seen the smog that comes from the totally uncontrolled factories there, too. The US was smart; it pushed the manufacturing that casued the great pollution fo the 20th century overseas and now you don’t have to see or breathe it. But it does affect you. And me, for one, I’d rather see what I am breathing than not know. We still have plenty of air pollution in the US and fracking and other non-renewable energy companies are the source of the problem.

And I could go on and on.

The fact is that we’re doing so many things to destroy the planet in ways we’d never imagined. I mean, for starters, can you imagine the lack of response to the Fukushima disaster. I mean JAPAN  KILLED THE ENTIRE PACIFIC OCEAN! And yes we’ll find a way out of this disaster too.

The thing that I’ve never been able to understand is why we (i.e., humans) don’t get that the real problem is that there’s too many of us. And I don’t mean Americans. Please believe what you want to believe. But as the world’s human population heads towards 11 billion at the end of this century, we left behind a long time ago the ideal population level. Never mind who’s number you believe. The fact is that the ideal human carrying capacity for the planet was closer to a few million than a few billion. Our species uses more resources than all the other species combined. And we pollute their waters, destroy their air, decimate their habitat, leaving no room or resources for ourselves much less all the other species that depend on this same spinning ball of blue.

I am not sure what it will take for us to realize the errors of our ways. One might’ve thought that we’d figure things out, but, no, we haven’t. Not Hiroshima, not Chernobyl, not Fukushima, not the multitude of smaller eco disasters can set us down a different path. The only true salvation for Earth is going to be disaster that affects us very directly and brings us down to size. Oh we’ll survive, but like the dinosaurs