As of 18th February 2023, this would be my 15th year since I reported duty in PETRONAS in this building here in Lutong, Miri, Sarawak.
Feels like only yesterday that I was this overweight, heavy-smoking, metalhead, videogamer who just reported for duty - and yet, QaddarAllah, 15 years later, in spite of all the re-organizations and internal changes that took place, somehow, I am still here .
Alhamdulillah, it has been a wonderful experience, and I’m grateful to have had the opportunity to be working in this organization, to collaborate with some of the most amazing professionals in the world, and grow through some of the best life experiences together.
In conjunction with this occasion, I decided to share a list of what I consider to be 15 of the most impactful events and experiences throughout my career. These are events that have had a significant influence and impact in my professional life, many of which also influenced my personality and personal life outside the workplace, too.
In hindsight, I used to wonder what is all the fuss about “years of experience”. When I re-read my own list below, I can see why: it’s through these experiences - good and bad - that we learn valuable life lessons that shape us into better people. As a young graduate, I would have loved to know these “real experiences”, so feel free to share if you find this beneficial - especially to our generations who will enter the workforce.
I excluded experiences from the past 3 years in order to avoid recency bias, to retain a level of anonymity so that it won't be immediately obvious who I am referring to, as well as factoring in the yet-to-be-proven uncertainty of how ‘impactful’ recent events will turn out in the long run.
Here are the summary list of 15 career-defining events:
1. “Akak takde masa!” - When my senior yelled at me, just because I asked her for help while i was struggling to do my first assignment. It was an important early lesson of what NOT to do as a senior, and how NOT to treat other people.
(Side note to my colleagues: she already resigned OK, so don't bother looking her up or guessing who )
2. Uninvited - When our host project team (from the same company) treated us like outcasts with unprofessional hostility. This hostile environment taught me to develop resourcefulness to find alternative means to get work done, effective negotiation, and professionally navigating office politics without burning bridges, and personal resilience to not to allow our emotions - especially toxic co-workers - to get to our heads.
3. Rejected & unwanted: When another department requested a process engineer from our team to be attached full-time to their project, our boss initially refused to release anyone. In the end, after a series of arguments and justifications, they finally agreed. But to cut their losses, they decided to send away the worst-performing process engineer.
That person was me.
Unflattering as it may be, what started off as a throwaway assignment eventually became one the starting point to some of my favorite years of my experience: the privilege to work with a great leader (one whom I consider to be the best boss I've ever had, hands down), collaborate with excellent team members, my first-ever good performance rating, the opportunity to lead projects in spite being a junior engineer, and opened the path to attain my certification as a project management professional (PMP). Not bad for an unwanted, underperforming reject.
That person was me.
Unflattering as it may be, what started off as a throwaway assignment eventually became one the starting point to some of my favorite years of my experience: the privilege to work with a great leader (one whom I consider to be the best boss I've ever had, hands down), collaborate with excellent team members, my first-ever good performance rating, the opportunity to lead projects in spite being a junior engineer, and opened the path to attain my certification as a project management professional (PMP). Not bad for an unwanted, underperforming reject.
4. When Faisal almost resigned -
At one point of time in my career, I felt I just wasn't made for this oil & gas engineering stuff. I decided I wanted to resign and instead pursue a career in teaching. But I gave myself some time, so I can "beef up my CV", collect professional certifications and end on a high. Turns out that having this sense of urgency supercharged my career and professional development in every area imaginable - and fueled me the much-needed passion I needed for the job that was lacking all these years. That's when I I could make a conscious decision to stay.
5. Weekend mentorship:
One time, our senior engineer spent a whole day over the weekend to coach and teach me to prepare for my technical assessment. The one day of coaching was so effective, that it helped me attain the best assessment score in my entire career, immediately got a promotion, and taught me the building blocks on subjects which I eventually became passionate about in teaching others. A little coaching goes a long way.
6. The Garbage Project -
When my manager assigned me with a waste handling project, and placed so much emphasis that I should “drop everything else and focus on this”, only to have it rejected by the end of the year and completely erased from my year end performance writeup because it was “controversial”. It was an extremely frustrating experience, making me feel that my efforts were a total waste of time. It taught me a leadership lesson on the importance of consistent expectations, being decisive, & being transparent without playing politics.
7. “No, he is competent!”:
When our partners expressed their lack of confidence in me, my boss put his foot down, yelled at them and shouted "No, he is competent! He is experienced!" It was the first time in my career I felt that my boss believed in me, and I felt inspired with a genuine sense of ownership to live up to high expectations.
8. Discovering my niche:
Being certified HAZOP Leader - After about 10 years into my career, I managed to obtain a certification in Leading HAZOP (Hazards and Operability Study). I was the first person among the team to obtain this, and because this wasn't our core job, initially I was quite stressed out by the additional burden to my core responsibilities. But - surprise - it turns out that I actually really enjoy it! And being the only one certified, it opened up opportunities to interact with and learn through many different project teams, engineers, SME's and contractors, which eventually gave me a major edge over my peers.
9. “Now you’ve just confused everyone”: After completing a lengthy engineering study, I sent out a long e-mail which detailed out all the necessary technical details for decision-making, feeling pretty proud of myself. In a surprising twist of events, my boss wasn't impressed, and simply said, "now, you've just confused everyone". This set in motion a whole chain of events that forced me to improve my communication and presentation, and eventually became one of my strengths.
A little feedback goes a long way.
10. Crisis! - Being appointed as SME (subject matter expert) member of an investigation team.
Initially I was really annoyed with this assignment, because of unprofessional behavior: the actual persons in charge couldn't bother to renew his/her offshore safety passport, so I was "forced" to take up this task because I was the only senior who had a valid offshore passport. Unexpectedly, this simple eventually developed into one of the most exciting, thrilling assignments which not only taught me many unique technical knowledge, but also an assignment that put to the test my attitude of collaboration, integrity, and professionalism; especially when I was eventually confronted by leaders who refused to accept my findings because this might result in "making our KPI red".
11. “I am here to develop others” -
When our boss drove a project to completion, refused to take any credit, and instead push his subordinates to take the awards and the limelight. When his subordinate said that the boss also deserves the credit, he simply replied with a private WhatsApp message: “I’m here to develop others.” How a simple whatsapp message became some of the most inspiring leadership words I've heard in my career - a masterclass of genuine sincerity and humility.
12. The Dream Team -
Early on in my career, I was assigned to lead a small team of young engineers, some of the most intelligent, energetic and passionate guys. Our boss called us the "Dream Team" - as cheesy as it sounds, we were determined to live up to it. Everyone pulled in their weight to make sure we facilitated the highest level of collaboration, professionalism, cohesiveness. During the year end performance review discussions, one of our team members said, "for the first time in my career, I was actually excited and looking forward to go to work, when I wake up in the morning". It was this strong relationship that motivated us to be a high-performing team who were willing to go the extra mile for each other, and eventually nailed targets we all thought were impossible. Until today, this small team continues to be my personal benchmark of great teamwork and what we can achieve together.
13. Fed up: How we turned the tides of a demoralized team - In one of the years, our team collectively suffered mediocre performances, which resulted in many team members feeling demoralized, and were frustrated with our boss. But I chose to take a risk and something different: walk up to his office, give him feedback directly to his face, which was honest, direct, and more importantly: respectful.l. The conversation turned into one of finding solutions to help build the team. As a result, the tables were turned completely and our team did very well after that.
A little conversation goes a long way.
14. Majlis Tilawah Al-Qur’an (MTAQ): Taking the first step. When I tried to just to "try my luck", I won. When I tried out the Murattal category in 2017, I won first place - totally defying any expectations.
Lesson: You never know what you're capable of, until you try.
15. Contract administrator -
A task that began as a lengthy, draggy, frustrating assignment early in my career, which I considered as an unappreciated burden. But it turned out to be one of the most valuable long-term experiences in my career, which offered me contracting experience that most of my other process engineering peers didn’t have (and turned out to be immensely helpful when I was a manager), and opened up many opportunities to expand my networking and get to build relationships with teams from other regions. It taught me never to belittle any task assigned to me or jump to negative conclusions too early: you never know how useful and important it will in the future.
(End List)
What you will observe from the above is that the 15 incidents aren’t all necessarily a pleasant experience. In fact, some of them are actually pretty painful. But in hindsight, this is what life is about: all the ups, downs, and everything in between - that’s what shape us into who we are.
It’s not the experience, themselves, that define us: it’s the choices we make, when we are confronted with them. It’s the attitude we adopt to turn these situations into opportunities and valuable learning lessons. From adversity to advantage. It’s those times we are challenged outside of our comfort zone, that’s when we experience the most growth and learning.
These experiences taught me to keep a positive attitude, keep moving when we encounter failures, mistakes and setbacks. Don't get easily disheartened or traumatized just because a few setbacks come our way. Our first few attempts will fail, and that’s okay. Mistakes are never final.
Sometimes, it takes a few failed attempts, a few bad experiences, a few “wrong” people in our path, to finally arrive at a successful outcome. It might take a few lousy seniors before we truly appreciate the gems of great teachers. And sometimes, these bad experiences allow us to appreciate the good experiences when we finally do get to face them down the road.
And in growing stronger from our past setbacks, it gives us the courage to try: to make mistakes, get back up again, try harder, and break new ground.
What I’ve also learnt over the years is the maturity to forgive and let go. When we look back at our experiences, there is no need to hold a grudge or to wait for the opportune moment to strike back. Take the high road and learn to forgive. Yes, they wronged you, and yes, they need to be held accountable for their misconduct - but we don’t need to perpetuate the cycle. Be the change we need. Try to practice empathy to those who have wronged us. Perhaps they have weaknesses and shortcomings of their own. Perhaps they, too, have unresolved issues and demons they’re struggling with. Have empathy, forgive them, move on, and learn from their mistakes: integrate this learnt wisdom when tackling similar situations in the future.
It's also worth noting that this is only a snapshot from my individual experience. They don't necessarily represent the organization as a whole.
In the coming weeks, I hope to be sharing more about these 15 events and shedding more light about the specific, unique lessons I attained from all of them.
My hopes is that this simple sharing has been beneficial to you, and can help you build more resilience, and approach the challenges with more maturity and optimism throughout the course of your career.
May Allah grant us the sabr to continuously improve and learn from our mistake, to endure the challenges of our lives with ikhlas, ihsan, and istiqamah, and allow these experiences to make us amongst the people of hikmah.
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