Changing Career Paths after an Injury: Q & A

Finding Your Self-Employment Niche

Q. I have a disabling injury and have to find a new occupation. What business could I start?

A. What activities or business industry would interest you, if you weren’t injured? Take some time to answer that question. Don’t limit your thinking because of your current situation.

For instance, there are architects and artists  in the visual arts field who are blind. The recent winner of Fox TV’s MasterChef is blind. There is a daredevil stuntman who earns a living doing what he enjoys most, yet he is wheelchair bound. These are just a few examples. At first glance, their choices seem counterintuitive.

Assistive technology may enable you to use your innate ability despite challenging circumstances.

Contact Jan Accommodation Network they offer free consulting services for aspiring entrepreneurs. The program is provided by the U.S. Department of Labor in collaboration with West VirginiaUniversity. A consultant will provide a comprehensive report of resources for your state to help you reach your self-employment goal.

References

https://askjan.org/entre/index.htm

http://gizmodo.com/5652375/how-a-blind-architect-still-practices-his-trade

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1309364/Teenage-wheelchair-stuntman-nails-worlds-double-backflip-painful-fails.html

http://abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/masterchef-finale-blind-chef-christine-ha-wins-season/story?id=17210282




Hidden Talents

Aptitudes of Louis Armstrong & Theodore Geisel

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Louis “Satchmo” Armstrong is known internationally
as a renowned jazz musician, but perhaps only diehard fans
are aware that, despite his lack of formal schooling, he was a gifted writer, too.

He penned his autobiography solo, without the use of the usual ghost writer
or collaborator. Armstrong’s book is regarded as one of the finest written
in the genre, according to Wall Street Journal drama and music critic Terry Teachout.

 And consider, Theodore S. Geisel, unanimously voted least likely to succeed
during his senior year at an Ivy League college.
He had a 2.6 GPA and ranked 165th out of 385 students, yet during the Depression era
he went on to become a famous Madison Avenue ad executive, a satirist, cartoonist,
and Hollywood scriptwriter.

In time, Geisel would walk away from his career,
taking a massive pay cut to focus on the field
where he felt he belonged; writing and illustrating children’s books.

Geisel had taken only a single art class,
having been told long ago by experts that his strange doodling lacked artistic sense.
But Dr. Seuss had finally found his calling.

Takeaway: Most people have, on average, six innate aptitudes,
many of which are unused or hidden, according to aptitude researchers.

Dee Adams is the author of
Finding Your Niche: Discover…
http://wp.me/P3Kr4S-U

References

 

Pops: A Life of Louis Armstrong. Terry Teachout. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2009.
Thedore Suess Geisel:Lives and Legacies. Donald Pease. Oxford University Press, 2010.
http://www.c-spanvideo.org/program/293722-1