"We are told to 'do what we love' in life and our careers. Is that a fallacy?" the Guardian asks in an article I came across this week- a question aimed at those aspiring to Steve Jobs's 'don't settle' motto while at the same time faced with real-life economic struggles and realities.
It's an ever
present question, a tug of war not just for young
people, but for those unsatisfied and unmotivated in the jobs they find
themselves in, those who know that they’re not doing what they love, but have responsibilities
that outweighs the possibility of change.
"DWYL
(Do What You Love) is a secret handshake of the privileged... According to this way of
thinking, labour is not something one does for compensation but is an act of
love. If profit doesn't happen to follow, presumably it is because the worker's
passion and determination were insufficient. Its real achievement is making
workers believe their labor serves the self and not the marketplace."
What does this leave us with- get rich or get real? I disagree. If you teach people to believe men like Steve Jobs are the exception to the rule, that their success is due to privilege, then you will fail before you start. Or worse- you will never try. No doubt the majority of us have or have had jobs that were taken out of need rather than love, to pay the bills rather than the passion for the daily tasks- my god I've cleaned toilets and sold dodgy timeshares in the Costa Del Crime along the way- but should we accept that as inevitable? That you don't get the choice, or the chance to change your mind along the way?
It's because we're measuring this quote in terms of his wealth- not his success. Success is that he found what he liked doing, did it well, built a company and family that he believed in, didn't give up despite obstacles, had something to show for his efforts and beliefs. This is the value- the net worth is the bonus.
What does this leave us with- get rich or get real? I disagree. If you teach people to believe men like Steve Jobs are the exception to the rule, that their success is due to privilege, then you will fail before you start. Or worse- you will never try. No doubt the majority of us have or have had jobs that were taken out of need rather than love, to pay the bills rather than the passion for the daily tasks- my god I've cleaned toilets and sold dodgy timeshares in the Costa Del Crime along the way- but should we accept that as inevitable? That you don't get the choice, or the chance to change your mind along the way?
It's because we're measuring this quote in terms of his wealth- not his success. Success is that he found what he liked doing, did it well, built a company and family that he believed in, didn't give up despite obstacles, had something to show for his efforts and beliefs. This is the value- the net worth is the bonus.
The root of our
attitudes has much to do with our education system, structuring beliefs about
how the world around us works and rewards us. From a young age you have an intrinsic
understanding about which subjects at school have value, and which subjects are
worthless in the 'real' world, the worth based on what career path it is
attributed to, which box it fits into.
"People
like Apple's Steve Jobs and Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg were held up as examples
(if not gurus) of this "DWYL" trend, alongside people who quit
investment banking jobs to become cheese farmers, plumbers or yoga
entrepreneurs"
I left my job in
London to study, write novels, learn to surf and live by the sea with my little red kayak. The world didn't
end, my parents didn't disown me. But if my novel is never published, and I
never 'make it,' if I return to London when I'm ready, am I to believe that it was foolish to follow what I love in my educational
choices and career decisions? Do I not get to choose what I do with my working
life, whatever my C.V ends up looking like?
The comments on the Guardian article left by the public were insightful- hinting at what has become a natural position
when we come to talk about success and jobs and money:
"I am advising my children to think
about the lifestyle they want, and work back from there to a job that will
afford that lifestyle and a university education that will allow it. "
This, surely, is
the wrong way round, but is a very true picture about ever-present teachings on
how to live a happy and successful life. 'Lifestyle' is the accolade that you
slave for, to enjoy at the weekends and on bank holiday's.
"In Steve Jobs' Stanford commencement
speech he urged graduates, "don't settle". Keep searching for the
thing that you love doing. It was a great speech, but I know several people who
have used it as an excuse for a continual search. I have a graduate relative
who is fast approaching thirty, and has never been in a job for more than three
months, because they haven't found that thing that they love. It's supposed to
be a finite search. If you haven't found it in a two or three years, then find
something you can force yourself to love."
Life, I would
argue, is a continual search; what else are you doing? You will never
arrive at who you are and what you want to do one spring afternoon. Your
passions and flavours change and develop as you do, and a rich and fruitful
life involves giving yourself permission to explore those interests. If you
have to force it, it don't fit.
Who said you have to have one job or one career for the duration anyway? You're going to be at work everyday, 5 days a week for about 40 years. That's a lot of time to work out what your good at, to change your mind about what you like doing. It all depends how you value success- by the measure of your own satisfaction and happiness, or by the milestones pressed upon us- house deposits, titles, car finance, holiday to Vegas.
Who said you have to have one job or one career for the duration anyway? You're going to be at work everyday, 5 days a week for about 40 years. That's a lot of time to work out what your good at, to change your mind about what you like doing. It all depends how you value success- by the measure of your own satisfaction and happiness, or by the milestones pressed upon us- house deposits, titles, car finance, holiday to Vegas.
I'm not
suggesting we all quit our jobs and go take photographs of sunflowers in a
field, but the question being pressed against lost graduates, university
hopefuls and people that are bored or unsatisfied in the their current jobs
leaves a bitter taste; are your passions and talents irrelevant when it comes
to the working world? Is following your dream a luxury that we all
eventually must forfeit?
@melodys_pen
Like this? Read
about the Forbes list top Ten Happiest Jobs and Top Ten most miserable jobs here
Here is the original guardian article.
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