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  • 21 hours ago
Life, Passion & Business podcast. How to explore your calling in Costa Rica with Richard Blank.

Exploring the creativity of the human spirit with just five simple questions. Those questions give us a window to explore the journey and life story of people that look like they have it sorted.

Explore your calling, are you on a life path that feeds your soul?

My guest on the show believes that everyone has a calling.

Richard Blank is a native of Philadelphia born to a family with more than the average means and there was a plan. He was on a path to an Ivy League education to study medicine or law.

But even at that age, he knew it was important to be inspired in his chosen career. Neither of these was his calling. He convinced his parents to let him take a different path. He went to the University of Arizona, earning a bachelor’s degree in communication and Spanish.

For his junior year at the age of 21, he took a semester at a university in Madrid. It was about absorbing the language and the Spanish way of life. While he did enjoy the party scene. He also took the opportunity to travel on trains and stay in youth hostels. He explored the art and culture of Europe.

On returning to the US he took an internship with a Spanish TV station. And for a while and another job working with an importer of Corona Beer.

He used his bilingual ability and communication skills to create opportunities for himself and built a career in telemarketer training.

The Big Break
The life-changing break came when he was 27 years old. He relocated to Costa Rica to train employees for one of the larger call centres in San Jose.

He was hooked on the industry, the country and the culture

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Transcript
00:00This is not an industry. I get sick of the crypto calls. I'm sorry. You can't.
00:05If you choose your time. And so people chose an industry that might seem like walking uphill.
00:12Yeah. Or it might seem that there's resistance or it might seem monotonous by doing the same thing.
00:18So if I've walked in those shoes, maybe I can understand where they're coming from.
00:24We all went to school. You know what it's like when you are doing math problems at 10 o'clock at night
00:29and you can't get it. And there's a test the next day. We understood that stress.
00:33We understood where that was coming from. And so, as I say before, the best thing to do is to not give a pass,
00:40but to put yourself in their shoes and to try to give the best sort of solid advice.
00:45So people might be able to overcome that sort of challenge.
00:50Yeah, it's great. That's good.
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