If you were born in the 1990-2000s, you missed the last decade of what βbeing a kidβ was supposed to be. Playing outside, no cell phones, no internet, neighborhood hangouts/bbqs, and Billy Joel. Sorry you missed out. What you didnβt miss out on was the worse advise given to the 70s-80s kids:
βFollow your passion!β
and
βYou can do anything! You can be whomever you want to be!β
The younger generation today is guided by the principles of hustle and grind, social media, and internet fame.
Unfortunate from 2019 study:
Iβm not quite sure if the hustle mentality is better.
Why So Serious?
βFollowing your passionβ is terrible advice. The context is work.
How about, βBecome competent and capable in your work.β - This is your work. This is your job. If itβs at the office or at home.
Being capable and proficient in a job function will always have demand.
Being capable and proficient in work will always increase possibilities, open doors, and new relationships.
Homemaker? - Make the home a home of peace. Do it well.
I donβt know about you, but Iβve had passions (feelings) change over time. Jumping all over the place in any endeavor does not make one proficient or sophisticated.
Allow passion to be passion. If it aligns with your work, amazing. If it doesnβt, you still have your work. The stoics would suggest we rely much less on passion anyway. Our reasoned choice is all that matters.
Can I Be Anything I Want?
Can I do anything in the world? No. Thatβs terrible advice.
No.
Should you aspire for excellence in a good life well lived? Absolutely. Where you are today is a full culmination of all of your life decisions, good and bad. We are where we are, whether we decided ourselves, or how we chose to respond when we didnβt get the choice. All of these actions add up to you, today.
If we look at the data-set of human capabilities, opportunities for being #1 in the world in all measurable categories, and consider the world population, we find that the chances of anyone you know being the top in anything is proportionally impossible. Frankly, itβs a statistical improbability that youβre even related to anyone that is rank 1 in something. Add in the amount of actual life and hard work put into that endeavor to become the topβ¦ and we quickly realize that in many cases, you actually donβt want to emulate the top performers in any category.
What have they sacrificed? Relationships, kids, marriageβ¦ need I go on? Their work ethic and imbalance of βwork-lifeβ is not something to be emulated. I could extrapolate on this, but I want to keep it short.
Better advice would have been: βFind the characteristics necessary for a successful life, in work, play, and relationships.β - Where βsuccessβ is defined as a progressive realization of a worthy goal.
I have worthy goals:
Spending 90% of my time at work using my best skills and capabilities. (Lucky for me I enjoy so much of the business-building process that I get to do this most of the time! Like writing bloggy-newsletters like this)! :)
Having amazing fun with my family in sports and life.
Have a healthy and peaceful home.
I hope Iβm getting better at progressively realizing my goals over the course of my life. I find better work patterns, behaviors patterns, and models to improve each aspect of these goals. Iβm being sanctified in my efforts all along the way.
Keep searching for better ways to improve aspects of your life. They are there! Even focusing on one tiny aspect of ones life can have tremendous effects to the whole. Itβs complex systems after all. Itβs all, weβre all, interconnected.
All the best,
ps
Love this perspective Peter!! My passions have changed as well but the work ethic has not. Hustlin!!!
Iβve Been Following Peter for the Past 7 yearβs and Listening to him has completely Changed my life and the way i view it! i truly admire this man ! Not only for his knowledge and Skills but for the Type of Person he is. He's always Providing Value and truly Cares About People . Thank u Peter for this amazing Letter β¨ππ«Ά