Having a successful career doesn't mean someone is happy. Here's why—and some insights to apply to your own life.
success are also linked to feelings of personal failure, disappointment, and alienation, as well as an increased risk of cardiovascular disease and hypertension.The life dissatisfaction that can accompany professional success is often the result of dissonance between expectations and reality, conflicting demands, feeling out of control, a lack of opportunity for external fulfillment, and developmental life changes that prompt reevaluation of life priorities.
He finds himself pulled in conflicting directions – employees who need him to ease up a bit, clients who have long-term needs, and a board of directors that sets metrics focused on their desire for a lucrative exit. In the meantime, his children barely see him and he desperately wants greater connection with his wife.Professional success often has its own Catch-22 predicament. When the demands of the role dictate how your time is spent, career achievement can feel like a trap.
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