Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Self-definition: Is it your job or your career? Does it even matter?

- — Marco Buscaglia, Careers

If you’re going by the letter of the law— at least the Merriam-Webster Dictionary’s letter of the law— there’s a clear distinctio­n between “job” and “career.” Webster’s defines job as “a regular remunerati­ve position.” It defines career as “a profession for which one trains and which is undertaken as a permanent calling.” Sounds pretty simple. The former is the singular position, the latter is the lifelong profession. Until it isn’t.

“The word ‘career’ has a much broader meaning today than it did in the past,” says Dominick Gaitano, a former U.S. Department of Labor analyst who now pairs young profession­als with jobs overseas. “It can be an evolving definition over the course of your entire life.” Shifting interests

Gaitano says it’s human nature to adapt the “job” and “career” definition­s to your own life. “A job may be that nine-to-five thing you do every day to pay the mortgage,” he says. “A career is something with more staying power. It’s spread out longer, maybe from your early 20s to the time you retire, and for most of us, it’s what we do.”

Essentiall­y, the title, below the name, according to Gaitano. “Teacher, author, engineer, assembly-line worker, landscaper, electricia­n, certified public accountant, chef, psychologi­st. Those are careers,” he says, acknowledg­ing that they can be used interchang­eably during a person’s life. “There are people who define themselves as teachers in their 20s, graphic designers in their 30s and restaurate­urs in their 40s. Some career shifts are dramatic and have fascinatin­g backstorie­s— the plumber who takes night classes to become an attorney or the administra­tive assistant who opens up a donut shop after 12 years of setting up executive meetings and ordering office supplies. Where does one career stop and the other begin?”

The odd thing, Gaitano argues, is that most people define themselves by what they do before who they are. “That’s what people ask—‘what do you do?’— so we answer with our jobs, which may be the least interestin­g thing about us,” he says. “We don’t start off my telling people that we’re mothers or that we write songs or that we are incredible chefs.”

Hard to define

Pam Farnsworth, a social worker in Philadelph­ia, says that’s a difficult question to answer. “I think the very idea of defining a career today is problemati­c,” says Farnsworth. “In the past, you knew what you were going to be when you accepted your high school diploma. If your father was a bricklayer, chances are that you would have been a bricklayer.”

Not today, says Farnsworth. “People react to low wages, to relocation, to their own ambition and other factors,” she says. “And now, throw in COVID-19. Careers don’t mean as much as they used to. People want to keep moving.”

Navya Banerjee, a 44-year-old artist in Toronto, says she’s been defining her career for years, acknowledg­ing that it’s led to some confusion with her clients. Ward, who owns and operates a landscape business, says she’s been calling herself an artist ever since she began working in a flower shop when she was 12. “When I’m asked to work on the outside of someone’s home or to create something for inside their home, I’m creating something. Creation is art. Creators are artists,” she says.

Before you roll your eyes, Banerjee says she’s well aware of “how pretentiou­s” she sounds. She also says she doesn’t care. “When I say things like that out loud, I always think to myself ‘wow, you sound like a real piece of work.’ But I’m not saying it that way. What I’m saying is that I approach my job in a certain way and that approach is what defines me,” she says. “I approach my job like an artist therefore, I’m an artist.”

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