From nursing school grad to wildly successful online entrepreneur: How Human Design Can Transform Your Work

In this episode, I had the pleasure of talking with human design expert, Eden Carpenter. She shared some amazing insights into the five human design types.

You’ll learn:

  • Understanding your human design type to find success and happiness in your work and learning environments.
  • Adding pleasure and satisfaction to your daily life
  • focusing on your strengths and skills rather than just your experience can create a resume that better represents what you bring to the table.

This was an amazing episode filled with so much wisdom and insight.

If you’re interested in learning more about human design and how it can help you find success and happiness in your career and life, you won’t want to miss this one!

Use the audio player above to listen, or tune in on Apple Podcasts or Spotify.

Understanding Human Design: A Guide to Finding Career and Learning Success

Are you feeling stuck in your career or struggling to learn in your current environment? Eden Carpenter, a human design expert, recently shared on the “Get the Hell Out of Healthcare” podcast how understanding your human design can unlock the key to finding success and happiness in your work and learning environments.

The Five Human Design Types

There are five human design types: manifestors, projectors, generators, manifesting generators, and reflectors. Each type has unique characteristics that determine how they best operate in the world. Understanding your type can help you identify your strengths and challenges, as well as guide you towards the best career and learning paths for you.

Adding Pleasure and Satisfaction

If you’re feeling stuck or unhappy in your current career or learning environment, adding pleasure and satisfaction can help you break out of the cycle of negativity and create a focus of positive energy in your life. Even small actions towards your goals can build momentum and eventually lead to bigger changes.

Learning Styles

Understanding your human design can also help you identify your learning style. For example, Eden has an open head center and a defined mind center, which means she is open to a lot of ideas but needs to see information to understand it. She also has a six-two profile, which means she learns best through recalling information in her conscious mind and storing it in her unconscious mind. Knowing your learning style can help you tailor your studying and learning methods to be more effective.

Resumes

Human design can also be applied to creating resumes. The “energetic resume” is a human design chart that identifies your management skills, problem-solving skills, and other strengths. By focusing on these skills rather than just your experience, you can create a resume that better describes what you’re actually capable of and what you bring to the table.

Breaking Out of the Traditional Career Mold

The traditional career and learning environments are not designed to fit everyone’s unique human design. Eden points out that hiring is often based on experience and quantifiable skills, which can leave people who are adaptable and flexible feeling stuck in low-paying jobs. By understanding your human design and identifying your unique strengths, you can break out of the traditional mold and find success and satisfaction in your own way.

By understanding your human design, you can identify your unique strengths, challenges, and learning style. You can also use this knowledge to create a career and learning path that is tailored to you, rather than trying to fit into a traditional mold. Adding pleasure and satisfaction to your daily life can help you break out of negative cycles and create a focus of positive energy. By focusing on your strengths and skills rather than just your experience, you can create a resume that better represents what you bring to the table. Understanding your human design can help you break out of the traditional career and learning environments and find success in your own way.

“Your goal is to go to bed every single day knowing that you did something for you.”

Eden Carpenter

Leave a Reply

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

shares