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Don't Follow Your Passion
One of the minor culture shocks in moving from India to America is getting used to the most exaggerated form of the emotions while articulating them. “Like” turns into “Love”. “Interest” turns into “Passion”. Etc.
Of course, I’m generalizing both Indians and Americans here but Im doing that to make a point here. One of the most common, most cringe-worthy and most meaningless is the platitude of “follow your passion” in all graduation speeches, how-to-become-successful listicles and interviews with successful people in America.
One’s perception of passion limits them to explore anything new. That seems suboptimal and likely the best path to local maxima. What we are interested in early on is a function of our experiences and exposure leading up to that point. That says not much deterministically about what’s great for us from a hobby and career standpoint. Experimentation is often at odds with “follow your passion” advice. One accepts the exploratory nature of emerging pursuits while other presupposes optimal paths are just to be found, not built. Latter discounts the extent to which new interests can be cultivated through discipline and curiosity.
This past fall, I had the opportunity to give at presentation at @UTexasMcCombs on the topic of pursuing your "dream job." Many years in the making, I hope it is helpful to those that are navigating their career journey.
— Bill Gurley (@bgurley)
9:11 PM • Mar 9, 2019
I highly recommend watching this talk by Bill Gurley on career advice. Striking how many took that away from the Bill Gurley talk My takeaway from it was aspire to have more knowledge than your peers & to keep leveling up. His first half made this point very strongly.
I now default to having a passion for experimentation :)
I haven't made it by any means yet but I often get asked by people how to get great opps when you don't have the traditional networks & resources.
I always say know a fuck ton more than your peers. Have encyclopedic knowledge of whatever you want to get into. That does wonders!
— Sar Haribhakti (@sarthakgh)
2:56 AM • Mar 10, 2019
"It’s a process of development, not a one-time discovery."
Exactly why I think "find your passion" saying is BS.
heleo.com/conversation-b…
— Sar Haribhakti (@sarthakgh)
9:53 PM • Dec 11, 2016
College graduation speakers do a disservice by predictably asking graduates to “follow their passion”.
For most, interests are to be cultivated. twitter.com/adammgrant/sta…
— Sar Haribhakti (@sarthakgh)
1:06 AM • Jun 25, 2018