http://time.com/2799361/how-can-i-figure-out-what-i-really-want-to-do-with-my-life/
How Can I Figure Out What I Really Want
to Do With My Life?
May
30, 2014
by Oliver Emberton, founder of Silktid
You
know how anyone can be anything they want, right? Well, they can’t.
Had
Bill Gates been born in a different time – or just a different town – he might
have spent his days as an illiterate peasant scooping up potatoes with his
hands.
Your
circumstances matter.Bill’s
real childhood had what mattered most: the opportunity to stumble upon what he
was born to do, and to go completely bananas doing it.
Few
are so lucky, but there’s still hope for the rest of us.
Kids are
geniuses
We
rarely prize people for acting like a child. The world is forever telling us to
“grow up” and “take responsibility”, as if anything else is a bug in the system.
On the contrary – childish behaviour can be quite brilliant. Kids try many
things. Stupid things, like eating soil or rollerskating on ice. But they’re fearless
and relentless.
Kids
don’t know what they don’t know. So they question everything.
Kids
are easily bored. They live in fantasy worlds because present reality is
limiting.
Such
behaviour is spectacularly good at figuring out the world and your part in it.
Acting like a kid is a brilliant way to explore your boundaries and deduce your
strengths. Ideally, your childhood is when you stumble upon your passions,
leaving your adult years to focus on them.
Unfortunately
many of us – like Bill the Potato Farmer – aren’t so lucky. The good news is,
modern life gives you more chances than ever to fix that.
Grown-up
children
Childlike
behaviour is generally frowned upon as an adult.
The
great advantage of being an adult is you can direct yourself. Children don’t
have the freedom or the awareness to steer their own development. Maybe your
childhood wasn’t what it could have been – but you can fix it now: Play.
The
first time baby John Lennon picked up a guitar, I doubt he seriously ran a cost
benefit analysis. If you’re trying something out, don’t be in too much of a
hurry to take it seriously. Aim to simply enjoy. The effort will come if the
passion is there.
Get reckless.
If
you really don’t know what you want to do,you’re going to have to try things
you haven’t done yet. And you’re going to fail – a lot – trying many
different things, most of which won’t work. Kids find this a lot easier because
they don’t worry about consequences. I encourage you to do the same. If it
helps, make it a proud part of your identity: you’re making a point out of
fearlessly trying as many things as possible, you sexy roguish daredevil you.
Question
everything. You know how everyone knew the world was flat until it wasn’t?
You have similarly limiting beliefs in your head right now – probably things
like “artists can’t earn a living” or “I’m not smart enough to do this”. Maybe,
but have you checked? Have you tried – really tried, like a
gun is pointed at your kneecaps – to find an alternative? Most really
successful people didn’t just find a way, they created one.
Ignore reality.
You
know how kids always dream of becoming astronauts, pop stars and giant
transforming robots? Barriers don’t apply when you’re five years old. And
whilst that seems like a stupid habit that you’d be wise to grow out of, if
you’re not sure what you want to do, don’t be in such a hurry to shut your
dreams down. Explore the impossible. Often it doesn’t lead to exactly what
you’re after (say walking on the moon) but it finds something else instead
(like a love of science that starts a whole career). You can’t know this in
advance. Just dare to follow where your heart takes you.
Chances
are, even if you don’t know what you want, that your childhood at least left
you some hints. Are there things you think of fondly, but never find the time
for? Start there.
The
great solace you have is that – by virtue of reading this – you automatically
have better options than potato farmer Bill. Access to the entirety of human
knowledge (The Google) for one. Better economics for another. And more freedom
than most of your grandparents could ever conceive of.
Now
get outside and play!
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