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Following your passion and other absurd ideas

Following your passion and other absurd ideas

Saturday June 27, 2015 , 7 min Read

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I see all this potential, and I see squandering. God damn it, an entire generation pumping gas, waiting tables—slaves with white collars. Advertising has us chasing cars and clothes, working jobs we hate so we can buy shit we don’t need. We are the middle children of history, man. No purpose or place. We have no great war. No great depression. Our great war’s a spiritual war...our great depression is our lives. We’ve all been raised on television to believe that one day we’d all be millionaires and movie gods and rock stars. But we won’t. And we’re slowly learning that fact. And we’re very, very pissed off.”
- Tyler Durden, Fight club.

Alain de Botton said that if you are a Martian trying to get an idea what human beings are like based on what is on the front table, you would come away thinking that human race spends all its time falling in love, squabbling with the family, and occasionally murdering somebody. What never seems to make an appearance is the idea that we go to work. There is, in his word, a crisis of working world in fiction.

Why are some works more glamorous, more romantic, and more profound than others? If - as the culture preaches - finding your passion is the end all and be all, then why may being a gas pumper or table waiter or white collared slave...or tomato farmer or data system analyst or packaging supervisor not be someone’s passion?

The trouble with passion maximization

The predominant world-view of modern urban world is the neo-Christian idea that we somehow ought to discover what our true callings are. But I suspect that this seemingly innocuous idea is no less than a quasi dogma. On a careful analysis we find it to be laden with umpteen assumptions.

  1. It assumes that there exist at least some tasks that we all are capable of being passionate for. That the calling is somehow an inherent part of the self, we just need to uncover it.
  2. That we all are autonomous enough to discover and identify such tasks for ourselves. With of-course the right amount of education, best-selling novels, and Deepak Chopra.
  3. That there are sufficient jobs out there which will correspond to our passions. Or we must create some such. Like someone with an intrinsic aptitude for programming but born in the middle ages is supposed to invent electricity, manufacturing, and computing, etc. - and then of-course code.
  4. That we will be good and fulfilled at doing the tasks we feel passionate for. If only a five-year-old can pursue playing with her toy car all her life.
  5. And finally that this whole thing is a good idea - that the greater good and well being of the world basically depends on individuals being good at what they do. The great unproven assumption of our times is that the distribution of individual passions is such that the world's machinery will keep on working and sustaining even when all these passions are realized.
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The only thing we must laugh out any less louder is point number four. Yes, admittedly we feel good and do better in the things we are passionate for. While you are at it - consider the job of being a cocaine dealer, it almost perfectly fits all the above assumptions and yet will almost surely attract disgust if not outright ban by most people. Even the stories of everyday legitimate jobs are so often about trauma and exploitation.

“The work we do is a punishment of Adam's sin,” - said the ‘Book of Genesis’. The ultimate aim of working life is leisure; by leisure is meant the kind of work which in itself does not feel like work - said Aristotle and echoed Bertrand Russell. The irony is that the ‘Book of Genesis’ has for once been way too accurate than our great philosophers.

You don't know what you don't know

Human beings did not evolve to imagine what it is like to be, say, an accounts manager two decades from now. The world has evolved too rapidly for our brains. There is an extreme if not insurmountable epistemic barrier which prevents us from imagining the unknown. And for the most part, we can’t even imagine the mere existence of unknown. Ask a young kid about the kind of things people do - and her vocabulary will revolve around doctors and lawyers and plumbers and soldiers (and of-course Astronauts) - basically what she sees around and on the screen.

What about grown-ups? We are often sure what we like but are pretty terrible in our judgement for the most part. The remembering selves and experiencing selves are arch rivals. What we think we like or would like is often way too different from what we actually end up liking. Behavioural psychology/ economics has shouted these kinds of facts from the rooftop enough number of times.

Our primitive brain wants us to aspire for values like victory, beauty, and social proof, etc., and culture assigns the relative amount of these values to the tasks humans do. An example of this mishmash of biology and culture is that healthy and active kids tend to love sports; and the sports loving kids tend to dream of becoming hockey players if they are Canadians, and cricketers if they are Indians. And warriors if they were ancient Romans.

Steve Jobs

Steve Jobs has become a pantheon for us for mostly the right reasons. Among other things, he is a symbol of following your heart, dreaming it and achieving it, and persistence. But a closer look at his life - which by the way is all too accessible if one can avoid the populist accounts - will tell you that he for one was the epitome of a wanderer if not someone pretty lost in his formative years. Jobs did not study technology, business, entrepreneurship, or any such. Instead he went to a liberal arts college where he was very interested in western history, dance, and eastern mysticism, etc. He spent a long time in India, and in practising Zen meditation. Today, Jobs is to motivation and passion what Gandhi is to ahmisa - and yet before Apple, Jobs was fired from another technology startup precisely for the 'lack of motivation and passion'. He told his biographer:

Yeah, we’re always talking about following your passion, but we’re all part of the flow of history… you’ve got to put something back into the flow of history that’s going to help your community, help other people… so that 20, 30, 40 years from now… people will say, this person didn’t just have a passion, he cared about making something that other people could benefit from.

That passion is largely a cultural construct is not exactly a bad news. If culture can dictate passions, so can we engineer our passions to direct the culture! We value money and luxuries, but they all are eventually means to some ends which we often don't consciously choose. Is your passion to make Android apps, or is it to create a kickass technology (or solve a problem, or enable other businesses) - these kind of mental switches make all the difference.

And entrepreneurs are these switch pushers, even makers. What they make is not merely services and goods, but culture and ethos too. The deconstruction of where passion comes from is therefore vital for an entrepreneur. ‘I’m passionate about this’; ‘this is a good opportunity’, and ‘this is valuable’ need not be about three different things.


References :

The Pleasures and Sorrows of Work- Alaine de Botton

In Praise of Idleness- Bertrand Russell

'Steve Jobs'- Walter Isaacson

80000hours.org

Image Credit : Shutterstock


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