VOGUE (Italy)

TRAIN YOUR INTUITION AND FIND YOURSELF

- By Pamela Golbin

Before asking what a job will bring to you, you should ask yourself a far more critical question:“What can I bring to the job?” If you cannot infuse your career with your passions, talents and past experience­s, you will not be productive. More importantl­y, you will not be happy. Identifyin­g the best parts of ourselves around which to build our profession­al profile is not trivial. Especially at a young age, it requires a good dose of intuition. Intuition, in turn, comes from self-trust, which is not an immutable characteri­stic, but rather a “psychologi­cal muscle” that we can all shape at will. How? By “training” it regularly, in a continuous process of trial and error. Hence my other suggestion: collect as many different work experience­s as possible, particular­ly at the beginning of your career. Challenge yourself.This will allow you to build your first profession­al network. Most importantl­y, it will make you know yourself better, fortifying your self-esteem at the same time.The more ambitious the challenges we embrace, the more profoundly they transform us. Last year, after reaching the 25-year milestone as chief curator at the Musée des Arts Décoratifs, I felt the need to change my career path. Easier said than done.To overcome the paralysing fear of leaving my comfort zone, I knew I had to challenge myself in an unpreceden­ted way. So I spent a semester at Harvard Business School and then moved for half a year to the holy mountains of Northern Japan, where I attended a Samurai training course held by Buddhist monks. Both turned out to be exhausting but rewarding experience­s – the first on an intellectu­al level, the second on a physical and spiritual one. By the time I came back home, I was a new person, and changing my life trajectory suddenly felt natural. Recently, I started a collaborat­ion with Jacquard, Google’s full-scale digital platform for smart clothing and textiles. After years spent curating the past, I finally fulfilled my wish to contribute to shaping the future.Working on our self-trust can be a revelatory experience.You may realise, as I did, that not all our drives to change come from a good place.As a Franco-Chilean born in Peru and raised in Venezuela, when I was a teenager I wished I had, like my classmates, only one nationalit­y to identify with.Today, I know that my internatio­nal background is one of my greatest strengths.To feel like we are not different from others, sometimes we decide to change precisely those uncommon features of our character, or our life story, that make us more special and that, therefore, we should keep the most. They are the sharpest arrows in your quiver. Don’t be ashamed of shooting them: bring them to your job.

Pamela Golbin is a fashion curator turned tech agent.

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