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Is the most important thing to getting a good network? What is the key to this career path? I've moved three times for a guy, giving up a great network and great job each time. It didn't always work out with the guy, but I always get back on track with a great career. (This, of course, does not have to be true.)
Not that you asked for advice, but mine is to focus not on getting him to separate from X, which is his problem, but on how you deal with having a husband who isn't separated from X (the old saw: you can't change someone else, only yourself). I can't remember. Sometimes it takes years, and you can't fake it.
Lots of job and careerchanges. One could say that your endless pursuit of career flexibility has paradoxically had the opposite effect in your life. I have some pretty crazy arguments for mine, also.) Posted by kelley on February 2, 2010 at 4:11 pm | permalink | Reply It's all about the network, real or perceived.
I do it for mine, too. Subscribe -- free! In fact, today at lunch a colleague mentioned the NY Magazine article on parenting and we both said how much we both loved that article and then ended up spending the rest of the hour talking about it. :) Thanks for all time you spend adding links to your blog. I know how time consuming it is.
I pretty much disagree with her on a lot of this): [link] Make your life more stable by changing jobs frequently (this is REALLY good, advises against MBA) [link] Forget about the soul search, just do something (recommends trying out different careers because no job will match ALL your strengths. I think you're fantastic.
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