Weekly Words of Wellness Archive
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• Living in Relationships
• Gaining Healthy Perspectives
• Practicing Self Care
• Building Values
• Spirituality
Gaining Healthy Perspectives
"Momisms 2013"
"Strength of Character"
"The Chess Teacher"
"Assist Leaders"
"What the Pope Election Teaches Us About Making Good Decisions"
"What's Your Story?"
"The Eyes of Our Children Are Upon Us"
"Many Kinds of Help"
"Everyday Epiphanies"
"Receiving Gifts"
"Your Christmas Present"
"Top Secret"
"Driving With Our Lights Off"
"Learning To Be A Good Referee"
"Rocking The Message"
"Full Contact"
"Harder Assignments"
"Inspiring Others"
Living Water
"The Road Less Traveled"
"Momisms"
"Heightened Awareness"
"The Power of Prediction"
"Hope Against All Odds"
"A Whole New Light"
"Of Storms and Stories"
"Love and Delight"
"Presenteeism"
"Vocational Wellness"
"Outsourcing Our Resolutions"
"Unwrapping the Gift of Gratitude"
"As Sick As Our Secrets, As Well As Our Honesty"
"Your Current Balance"
"The Universal Wisdom of the Twelve Steps-Part 2""
"Back To School"
"Many Kinds of Love"
"The Best Time To Plant A Tree"
"Life Is Not A Spectator Sport"
"New Muscles"
"And To Dust We Shall Return"
"Listening to Whispers"
"Finding Our Voice"
"Light One Candle"
"Whatever We Pay Attention To Is What Will Grow"
"This Election Season, I Vote For......
“In the Autumn, Time Seems ‘Speeded Up’”
"Keeping the Problem, the Problem"
"Overcoming Homesickness"
Deep Wells and Deep Wellness
In Honor of the World Cup: "The Beautiful, Simple Game"
"What Does 45 degrees feel like"
"How Do You Spell Success?"
"The Best Olympic Race of All"
"Life In Our Years"
Ritual and Community
Rose-colored or Tortoise Shell?
Of Mowing and Mindfulness
Endings and Beginnings
You’ve Got Talent
May Your Easter Joy Be Solid This Year
Can We? Yes. Will We? Perhaps.
January 13, 2012
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"Vocational Wellness"
The Rev. Dr. Scott Stoner
At Living Compass we support people as they work on “whole-person” wellness, which means that we help them address wellness in all dimensions of their lives. This includes vocational wellness--something you may not have heard of before.
The word vocation comes from the same word as vocal, or voice. A vocation then can be thought of in two ways that are related to this root meaning of voice. The first meaning is that discovering our vocation is the process of discovering our voice in the world. Whenever we take on a new role in life, it is natural for us to imitate others who have fulfilled that role before us. As we get more comfortable with the role though, we begin to find and develop our own voice. Developing our own unique voice in the world is one aspect of vocational wellness.
The second meaning of vocation as it relates to its root meaning of voice is that our true vocation in life is found by listening to what it is we are called to be or do in life. What is the voice of the One who has created us calling us to be or to become? This requires that we spend time listening and discerning that voice and then being willing to act on what we hear. We are most aligned with this voice when are are living from the place of our deepest passions and concerns.
All of this is brought together in a quote by Richard Bolles, the author of What Color is Your Parachute? He writes that our vocation, our purpose in life, “can be found where our deepest passions and gifts intersect with the worlds needs.” While this is an ideal that for most of us is perhaps never full attain, it is a wonderful way to describe what we are striving for when it comes to vocational wellness.
Your vocation may or may not overlap with your job. Your vocation may be more fully expressed through volunteer service, or through your relationships with your family, friends, neighbors and/or faith community. Once we have a clear sense of our vocation, we will find ways to express it in many creative ways, not so much because we are trying to do so, but because we cannot help but do so.
Martin Luther King Day will be celebrated this Monday. This day celebrates a man who clearly discovered and lived fully into his vocation. He responded to a greater call and found the place where his deepest passions and gifts intersected with what the world needed at the time that he lived.
Of course, none of us are called to be Martin Luther King. We are instead called to live fully into the unique person that God has called and gifted each of us to be. May the life of the Rev. Dr. King inspire each of us to find that place where our deepest passions and gifts intersect with the needs of our small corner of the world.

