I was mid-making a thread about this when the forum stopped working.
There was a thread on here about careers and a lot of people gave the advice of following your passion. I think this is very vague advice that has left many millenials in quite a pickle.
The article I wanted to post suggested that people don't follow their passion (as a career)...unless they are able to answer some critical questions such as:
Can you earn a living doing it?
I'd add an adjective before earn here maybe good or adequate for the standard of living you want.
Would it still be your passion if you had to do it every day to make money?
Young people may idealize a certain career but when something you thought was your passion is constrained by everyday workplace politics, the "passion" can quickly fade and if your entire career choice was based on passion then what's left to ground you?
Is the thing you’re passionate about related to a skill that you have, that you want to develop, and that’s needed in the market?
There was a thread on here about careers and a lot of people gave the advice of following your passion. I think this is very vague advice that has left many millenials in quite a pickle.
The article I wanted to post suggested that people don't follow their passion (as a career)...unless they are able to answer some critical questions such as:
Can you earn a living doing it?
I'd add an adjective before earn here maybe good or adequate for the standard of living you want.
Would it still be your passion if you had to do it every day to make money?
Young people may idealize a certain career but when something you thought was your passion is constrained by everyday workplace politics, the "passion" can quickly fade and if your entire career choice was based on passion then what's left to ground you?
Is the thing you’re passionate about related to a skill that you have, that you want to develop, and that’s needed in the market?