logo-inner
logo-inner
    
  • ciCoach

  • Menu
  • Home
  • Meet Rosalind
    • Why This?
    • About Rosalind
    • Ask Me Anything
    • Press Coverage
    • Testimonials
  • Work With Me
    • Customized Coaching
    • Just In Time Career Coaching
    • Kickstart Your Career
    • Career Change When Living With Chronic Illness
    • Speaking/Workshops
  • Resources
    • Free Resources
    • The Guidebook Series
    • The Keep Working Workbook
    • The Book
  • Newsletter
  • Contact

Transition… It can be a tough balancing act

September 30, 2007 by Rosalind Joffe 3 Comments

istock_000000873526xsmall.jpg Great post on one of my favorite bloggers, Pamela Slim / Escape from Cubicle Nation. 8 Strategies to get the most from painful or awkward life transitions . About to have her 3rd baby, she offers great ideas for going through those times when you’re experiencing change and it puts you off balance.

She even quotes from a favorite book of mine, Transitions: making sense of life’s changes , William Bridges. I frequently recommend it to clients. Neither Bridges nor Slim talk about or live with chronic illness (at least that I know of). But it doesn’t matter. We’re all going to face transition sooner or later in our lives, for one reason or another. Living with illness creates a state of constant transition. It’s usually not pleasant while you’re there. And, at some point you will move on. But, you have to allow yourself to be in that space of “off balance” so you can develop into the person you’re going to be. Rosalind

Filed Under: Attitude, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness

About Rosalind Joffe

Comments

  1. Herman Najoli says

    October 3, 2007 at 7:03 am

    Hi Rosalind. I’ve been thinking about this very topic. In my blog today my post was about “Navigating the Stormy Seasons of Life”. A couple of months ago, I posted about Transitions and the Skill of Moving On. I think that transitions can be distinguished from storms. Not all transitions are stormy but all storms are transitions. What’s your thinking on this?

  2. Herman Najoli says

    October 3, 2007 at 7:07 am

    Hi Pam. I’ve been thinking about this very topic. In my blog today my post was about “Navigating the Stormy Seasons of Life”. A couple of months ago, I posted about Transitions and the Skill of Moving On. I think that transitions can be distinguished from storms. Not all transitions are stormy but all storms are transitions. What’s your thinking on this?

  3. Rosalind says

    October 3, 2007 at 8:31 am

    Hi Herman
    I know you meant to write to me, not Pam 🙂 – so I’ll respond. I think it’s all how we view it. Some people love storms — the “sturm un drang” (I’m sure I don’t have the German correct here) of them. Others hate things getting out of control. I think we just have to figure out what we can “navigate” best — what’s our style and what’s going to be useful and go with that. But I’d agree that transitions don’t have to be stormy but they’re usually do feel like we’re off balance. That’s my take at least
    Rosalind

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Subscribe to our
weekly "Working with Chronic Illness" Newsletter
AND
Receive a FREE report
"Chronic Illness at Work – Career Success IS Possible."

subscribenow

 

Recent Posts

  • Whose shoulders do you stand on while living with illness?
  • Are You Talking About Mental Illness?
  • Are You Feeling Desperate for a Diagnosis?
  • Is this new job market good for us, the chronically ill?
  • How Are You Doing Talking About Illness?

Categories

  • Attitude
  • BOOK – Women Work and Autoimmune Disease
  • Career Development
  • Health Info
  • Job hunting
  • Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness
  • Starting a business
  • Talking about it
  • Uncategorized
  • Working for others
  • Working with chronic illness
  • Young with Health Problems
Rosalind Joffe

rosalind@cicoach.com

617.969.1930
How can I help you?
I specialize in working with professionals living with chronic health conditions who want to continue to thrive, not just survive. Learn more by clicking here.
Women, Work and
Autoimmune Disease: Keep Working Girlfriend!

by Rosalind Joffe
with Joan Friedlander
© 2026 Rosalind Joffe, ciCoach | Photograph by Meri Bond