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How can I find my passion?

Oliver Emberton

Too many of us believe in a magical being called ‘passion’. “If only I could find my passion”, we cry. “Finding my passion would make me happy”.

Well, passion is real, and very powerful. But almost everything people believe about finding it is wrong.

Rule 1: Passion comes from success

All of our emotions exist for good reason. We feel hunger to ensure we don’t starve. We feel full to ensure we don’t burst. And we feel passion to ensure weconcentrate our efforts on things that reward us the most.

Imagine you start a dance class. You find it easy. You realise you’re getting better than others, and fast. That rising excitement you feel is your passion, and that passion makes you come back for more, improving your skills, and compounding your strengths.

The enemy of passion is frustration. If you constantly struggle with something, you’ll never become passionate about it. You learn to avoid it entirely, guaranteeing you never improve.

Most people get this backwards. They think we discover our passion, and that makes us good at something. It’s actually finding that you’re good which comes first. Passion comes from success.

Rule 2: Childhood is where passion goes to die

In theory childhood provides a great opportunity to try a bit of everything, find your talents, and with them, your passions.

But think for a moment how badly the system is stacked against you. Say school lets you try 20 subjects, ranking you against thousands of other children. Those aren’t good odds. Most kids are, by definition, around average. And it doesn’t matter how much we improve education, because people need to feel exceptional to feel passionate, and improving education simply moves up the average.

Say you’re one of the lucky ones, and you’re top of your junior math class. The education system will keep rising your difficulty until you find a level – like college – where you’re not exceptional anymore. Even if you actually areobjectively pretty great, once you feel merely average, you’ll find your passion slipping.

And that’s if you’re lucky. What if your passion was for art? From an early age that passion is compromised by its social consequences. “It’s hard to make a living from painting” say your parents. “Your cousin is doing so well from engineering. Why can’t you be more like him?” And so you put your passions to one side, and let them wither.

In a population of billions, it’s obvious that not everyone can be unusually great at a handful of academic subjects. What if your true skills are in speechwriting, or creative dance, or making YouTube commentaries of videogames? None of those things are even on the syllabus.

And so most people grow up without much passion for anything.

Rule 3: Passion can be created

It may help to know that the most successful people in life generally didn’t pick their passion off a shelf.

In fact, many of the world’s most successful people dropped out of education entirely. Not because they were stupid – but because they found other areas where they were more skilled that education did not recognise.

They created their own passions.

Only a tiny fraction of people can expect to excel in the narrow subjects that childhood primes us for. And competition in that space is basically ‘everybody in the world who went to school’, which doesn’t help our chances.

But if you look outside of that space, you’ll find less competition, and more options. And this is how you tip the odds of finding a passion in your favour.

Option 1: Create something

When you create something new, you’re inventing something to be passionate about.

You might design novelty cushions, or write Batman stories, or start a Twitter account dedicated to fact-checking politicians.

New things are relatively uncontested. By creating something new, you’ve made your odds of becoming exceptional far, far higher.

Now it’s important to note that this doesn’t sidestep Rule #1: passion comes from success. So if your new Twitter account only has 5 followers after a year, you probably won’t be too passionate about it. If you had 5 million, you’d have quit your job. You must find success to fuel your passion.

But at least you’ve drastically improved your odds, because your competition is so limited. Only a handful of people will even dare to try something new. And you can be one of them, just by starting.

You see this pattern throughout history’s greats. A student called Mark was never going to be the world’s greatest programmer. But he started building cool websites, and he found he was unusually good at this because even better programmers rarely dared to try. It just so happens one of his little experiments became Facebook.

Option 2: Lead a new trend

The older and more established an area is, the harder it will be to compete in. Millions have got there before you, and the lower your odds of standing out, the lower your odds of being passionate.

But there’s always a new frontier being born, a place where everyone else is hopelessly incapable, and even modest skills can be impressive.

Say you were a teenager who started making YouTube videos, back in 2005. You grow a modest following, and your growing success excites you. By the time the ‘grown up’ world had realised YouTube was Kind-Of-A-Big-Deal with 4 billion views every single day, you’ve become a passionate master of an invaluable new craft.

That isn’t fantasy. There are mountains of hugely successful YouTubers, and most started in the same way: before everybody else. It’s the same for the first bloggers, rappers, and videogame designers.

If you can find something new that’s growing fast, and get skilled at it early, you’ll find it disproportionately easy to excel because of the lack of competition. And that’s your new passion right there.

Option 3: Fuse mediocrity

One limitation of education is it’s designed to narrow your skills. Education generally finds your One Best Thing, and pushes that thing as far as you can stand it:

The problem is most of us, by definition, can’t be the best in any one area. But we can be exceptional in our combinations.

Say you’re an average artist, with a decent sense of humour. You won’t have much hope with an art degree, and you can’t study ‘humour’ as a subject. But you could be an awesome cartoonist.

Or take an average business student, with some programming ability, and decent sales skills. That person is surprisingly well suited to become the boss of others who were better than them in any one of those areas.

The most successful people are almost never defined by a single skill. They are a fusion of skills, often not even exceptional skills, but they’ve made their fusion exceptional. Steve Jobs was not the world’s greatest engineer, salesperson, designer or businessman. But he was uniquely good enough at all of these things, and wove them together into something far greater.

This is the final route you have to finding your passion: combine skills into something more valuable. Remember, passion comes from success. If a new combination gets you better results, that could be your passion right there.

Why passion matters

Passion is attractive. As passion comes from believing you’re unusually good at something, being passionate is a very sincere way of saying, “by the way, I’m awesome”.

Passion will persuade people to follow you. It will persuade people to believe in you. But most importantly, passion will persuade yourself. Passion is an emotion specifically intended to make you go crazy and work your ass off at something because your brain believes it could rock your world. That, like love, is a feeling worth fighting for.

And like love, what we’re passionate about is too important to leave to the mercy of fate. If you haven’t found your passion yet, create new things, lead new trends, and fuse new combinations. But don’t ever stop looking.

https://www.quora.com/How-can-I-find-my-passion-9


San Bhaskaran

Climb a mountain – any mountain you can climb…one that you find interesting..

At age 16, I rebelled. My mom told me not to be friends with someone I had just met at the beach and took a liking for. He was a nice guy to be friends with.. at least thats what I felt.

So I left home during holidays and hanged around only this friend and his friends.. the problem was that they lived in an area where even the police did not enter.

Not because they could not, because they were scared!  The police car would drive up to two guys playing poker in the middle of the road, turn back and go away!!

It was exciting at first to be part of this gang! very cool.. but soon..when things started escalating.. seeing some people ending up in hospitals etc… I started to be scared and decided to climb down that mountain..

I had climbed a steep risky and dangerous mountain and realized that is not my destination..

But I learned something about myself :

I realized that I love power and freedom, but not that kind of power – power to make peoples lives better was more attractive for me..

Then I went to business school :

It was very interesting, Marketing and IT was my favorite topics, I read a lot and often got bored in the classroom because I used to learn things in advance.. that is when a new mountain appeared…

Our class was organizing an event and they needed funds.. that sounded like an exciting idea.. I ended up raising 200% of the funds they planned for and needed for the program.

The company to whom I sold the idea offered me a job, but I had other plans… I rejected the job offer and moved on.

Climbing that mountain made me realize I like sales and doing business deals..

Later in life I started working for a startup company – very close to where I lived- I did not have a choice… I needed money to live and had no money in the pocket purchase tickets to go and attend interviews in Paris.

I always cleared the telephone interviews with companies  but never went to the final interview. Only one company told they will pay me the ticket back if I get selected.. but I could not go.

Ironically, GE Healthcare, for which I could not go for a final interview, ended up partnering with one of my firms later in life..

So I got to what I knew best – selling – I sold the idea of me setting up a company that would do some work for the start up at a cost 2X lower than their current costs… It worked.

So I went on to climb another mountain – setting up my own company.

It was one of the biggest mountain I climbed – taking the company from just 2 to close to a 100. When I was climbing that mountain and was quite high, I realized this is not what I want to do!

I could see other bigger mountains more clearly, every time I climbed one – that offered a higher challenge – a more exciting journey – a bigger reward for success that you can see only from the top of another mountain…

So I sold my company  and went on a tour of Europe, just enjoying the time off, buying nice cars, etc etc.. wasting money and time.

Once I got bored and lost a lot of money, I wanted to climb that other big mountain I saw.. so I stared my new venture… A bigger climb, A bigger risk .. and a bigger reward if I succeed, a bigger danger if I fail.. ( I have a little skydiver in me..)

Did I know what I really want when I was 16 year old? No… I just did what I found exciting and reached a point where the perspective changed.. then I moved to to what is more exciting to me with the new understanding…

I think for me the secret is simple – do not stand down there at the bottom of a range of mountains wondering which one should you climb because most of it is above the clouds and you do not know if you will find something on the top..

Do not waste time thinking if will it fit you, will that be the best thing to do etc.. many people waste a lot of time thinking and wanting to do the right things to so others do not make fun of them later – etc..

Just start climbing one that you find most exciting and challenging… the more you climb.. the better your understanding of who you are and what you want – often do not want….

Is all the time spent climbing other mountains wasted – absolutely not.. I would not have my life any other way!

Good luck to your journey – Start climbing the mountain that excites you the most  – take on that challenge!

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