To find work you love, don't follow your passion | Benjamin Todd | TEDxYouth@Tallinn

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  • čas přidán 25. 03. 2015
  • Mainstream career advice tells us to “follow our passion”, but this advice is dead wrong. Research shows that people who take this approach are ultimately no more likely to enjoy or excel at their jobs. Instead, if you’re looking for a fulfilling career, here’s a new slogan to live by: Do what’s valuable.
    Benjamin Todd is the co-founder and Executive Director of 80,000 Hours, an Oxford-based charity dedicated to helping people find fulfilling careers that make a real difference. In three years, 80,000 Hours has grown from a student society to a thriving charity featured on the BBC, the Washington Post, NPR and more, and whose online careers guide has been viewed by hundreds of thousands of people.
    Benjamin Todd on heategevusorganisatsiooni 80 000 Hours kaasasutaja, nende eesmärk on aidata inimesi, kes tahavad suurendada oma karjääri positiivset mõju maailmale. Ben on juhtinud 80 000 Hoursi kasvu kolme aasta jooksul tudengiorganisatsioonist Oxfordi heategevusorganisatsiooniks, mida on mainitud nii BBC, Washington Post ja NPR jt.meediaväljaannetes. Ben on õppinud Oxfordis füüsikat ja filosoofiat, avaldanud kirjutisi kliimafüüsika teemal ja räägib hiina keelt.
    This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at ted.com/tedx

Komentáře • 6K

  • @pocok5000
    @pocok5000 Před 7 lety +11890

    Let's not forget, that every time a successful person gives career advice, there is a selection bias in the background. Other people might tried the very same thing and failed, but we will never hear about them, because they are not successful.
    Your personal experience is the most reliable source of information, don't follow any advice blindly. Try things, don't be afraid of failure, and see what works for you.

    • @_modiX
      @_modiX Před 7 lety +267

      Exactly, to overcome the survival bias you have to look on the whole set instead of a subset and focus not only on successful results, but even on all the failed results, too.

    • @KrstenaloKrstenalosleman
      @KrstenaloKrstenalosleman Před 7 lety +3

      modi X

    • @christineowori750
      @christineowori750 Před 7 lety +189

      You know something +David Kertesz, your comment made me feel so much better. It reminded me that its okay to try different things and see what works for you, Thanks for that

    • @pocok5000
      @pocok5000 Před 7 lety +34

      I am happy to hear that, thanks!

    • @SebastianLopez-nh1rr
      @SebastianLopez-nh1rr Před 7 lety +81

      Life is mere improvisation :) this comment should be at the top

  • @timelessadventurer
    @timelessadventurer Před 6 lety +8203

    A 15 minute talk to tell you to help others to be happy. There, now I helped others by saving them 15 minutes

    • @kadaknarial6744
      @kadaknarial6744 Před 6 lety +211

      Christian Pukala should have seen this comment earlier

    • @Quenche
      @Quenche Před 5 lety +128

      Yeah would have appreciated this before I watched the whole 15 minutes lol

    • @ncmathura
      @ncmathura Před 5 lety +29

      Borrrrrringgggg

    • @omarh8731
      @omarh8731 Před 5 lety +207

      but it has some details in there man don't be so unfair

    • @harinath2007
      @harinath2007 Před 5 lety +68

      I would have still watched it to experience it. Nevertheless, I get your sarcasm :)

  • @thomaslavelle1853
    @thomaslavelle1853 Před 3 lety +1911

    my experience is that once your "passion" turns into job , it changes it's characteristics . It turns into something that eventually disgusts you because you have to do so many tedious and unpleasant duties that didn't exist when it was just a "passion". This has happened to me 3 times in my life. because I was stuck on the idea of only doing things I was" passionate about" and naturally good at. Finally after seeing through the whole "passion" fallacy , My advice is that it's best to find something that you neither like or hate, one that you can take or leave, you don't mind going to work , in other words neutral. If it helps the world , great. If it only helps the people you serve , fine.if it supports your life well and doesn't burn you out , cool. As a add-on piece of advice, I would suggest when you need to make a decision between 2 things, for example learning a trade or becoming a professional dancer, do both. When you are young , you have enormous energy , so do both things. Then you have practicality and passion both covered.

    • @doablefilms9380
      @doablefilms9380 Před 3 lety +53

      so so true. Many of us enjoy to do things, but to do those things under pressure to be great and 5 days a week even when we don't feel like it is another matter. Also what you tell yourself about what you're doing changes how you feel about it.

    • @sardalamit
      @sardalamit Před 3 lety +82

      I concur. I was a professional animator and later on couldn't even watch anything animated or even heavy CGI related. Post that, another career in one of my "passions " and 8 years down the line now I feel burnt out.
      Contemplating a change. But worried this will be a never ending cycle. One of the biggest problems with following your passion and making it a profession is: you attach your value to your work. I found myself pursuing perfectionism and even taking on more work and correcting and completing others mistakes. Then there's always a boss who wants to take advantage of this particular quality.

    • @thomaslavelle1853
      @thomaslavelle1853 Před 3 lety +19

      @@sardalamit Well said. This is especially true in creative fields where you find yourself at odds with what you are doing but can't just walk away because you are dependant on it.

    • @redl0ydd752
      @redl0ydd752 Před 3 lety +12

      @@thomaslavelle1853 sometimes that thing is the only thing you can do cause no matter what you do, you always think to yourself 'I could be doing that'

    • @Izik8890
      @Izik8890 Před 3 lety +47

      Do both! I love this advice. Somehow we get stuck on the idea that we can only choose one thing. This is much healthier for the mind and body I think. I used to work in a theatre and got burnt out - I thought - what is the way out? I realised that ideally people would do their practical jobs part time and have more time for art.

  • @InMotionForAMillion
    @InMotionForAMillion Před 3 lety +813

    "Following their passion actually made them more likely to die."
    Well, that's uplifting.

    • @bushmaster7810
      @bushmaster7810 Před 3 lety +81

      last time i checked everyone’s chance of death is 100%? Lol.

    • @trajectory7235
      @trajectory7235 Před 3 lety +19

      @@bushmaster7810 haha, that made me laugh. Can't believe I didn't notice that when he said it in the video lol

    • @LancelotGraal
      @LancelotGraal Před 3 lety +33

      Also who cares? They died happy.

    • @lendri5996
      @lendri5996 Před 3 lety +42

      I get his point but isn’t a short life filled with happiness better than a long, boring life full of doubt?

    • @nocopyright-lalimusic3768
      @nocopyright-lalimusic3768 Před 2 lety +3

      @@LancelotGraal agree

  • @katenka_ana3997
    @katenka_ana3997 Před 4 lety +6595

    Me before this video: I have no idea what I should do
    Me after this video: I have no idea what I should do

  • @blackhawkX02
    @blackhawkX02 Před 5 lety +3020

    Man, the world is full of people who follow their passion and have fulfilling lives, and also it's full of people that follow money and have fulfilling lives, and others that pursuit a meaning and have fulfilling lives.
    The key is to find what is best for you out of those things and balance it with the others because that way you can find a way to make it fulfilling and give something back to society. If you can't balance these things of course you're going to fail, it is not as simple as saying "choose/don't choose what you're passionate about.
    Lately I've been realising that almost anyone can apply for a TED talk and speak like if they had all the answers. So, it's on us, to figure out which TED talks are useful for us and which ones are not.

    • @fridayimp7784
      @fridayimp7784 Před 4 lety +23

      Wow so you think that the difference between being paid and not being paid judges the person as a whole... Just wow

    • @nikolasgunadi765
      @nikolasgunadi765 Před 4 lety +16

      Louder for the people in the back!

    • @anjusanal
      @anjusanal Před 4 lety +8

      marsjacobvolta, the first reply has been edited, so when the comment was originally posted, he might have not added those last two lines saying that there are some good tedX talks.

    • @Paul-dc3vi
      @Paul-dc3vi Před 4 lety

      ​@@singinglawnchair Actually that's not true, a TedxYouth event has taken place and will again at Rhodes,Greece in which any high school student can apply and it's free.

    • @Siaru692
      @Siaru692 Před 4 lety +19

      @@singinglawnchair cool
      but what part in this video you found that is not resonated?
      I mean it says that find what valuable career you can choose with your skill and passion it seems both realistic and idealistic
      Caz No matter what your passion job is you need to make money through it and to earn money
      You must have something to offer to others
      Isn't that how the money works? Through Trade?
      I can't find more fulfilling answer than this video so I just wanna know what you think is better option for choosing carrer

  • @jackclouds
    @jackclouds Před 3 lety +852

    99% of people don't care about success and money, most of them just think that they do, but actually everyone is looking for empathy, connection, realization, belonging, love and being loved, being able to feed yourself and your beloved ones, etc...

    • @mego8325
      @mego8325 Před 3 lety +17

      True. And oddly, how the money would roll if we were actually able to touch base with those things and maintain them.

    • @jimreadey2743
      @jimreadey2743 Před 3 lety +12

      And, @@mego8325, it wouldn't have to roll nearly as much as most believe in order to form a foundation for our happiness.

    • @jimreadey2743
      @jimreadey2743 Před 3 lety +3

      Hear, hear, Jack...I 100% agree! ♥

    • @iyedbouazdia3594
      @iyedbouazdia3594 Před 3 lety +4

      So true. Thank you

    • @soniarodriguez6651
      @soniarodriguez6651 Před 3 lety +3

      Purpose, everything comes to that.

  • @poly_hexamethyl
    @poly_hexamethyl Před 3 lety +574

    Counterexample: I followed my passion and have a successful career. Conclusion: Don't follow other people's examples. When young people ask me for career advice, I always feel uncomfortable. I never suggest that anybody use me as a role model. You need to figure out what works for you.

    • @hulkhogan4218
      @hulkhogan4218 Před 2 lety +31

      Young lad is overthinking the whole thing. Trying to find meaning in his mundane career path.

    • @gloriaomurunga5197
      @gloriaomurunga5197 Před 2 lety +30

      honestly the best comment because it was exactly what i was thinking. conditions surrounding us are completely different so of course our lives will pan out differently.

    • @diegoalejandrobermeocastro5549
      @diegoalejandrobermeocastro5549 Před rokem +1

      So true

    • @pandax5359
      @pandax5359 Před rokem +1

      @@hulkhogan4218 it's true though

    • @oj818
      @oj818 Před rokem +1

      Sometimes people can confuse liking with passion; and I found it out when I realised what I have been doing for years.
      I really wasnt interested in music(and I knew it), it was just an escape. I gave up on football and needed something. Maybe football was my real passion , maybe should have had more patience.

  • @ofnir123
    @ofnir123 Před 7 lety +1448

    I literally just quit a job I was very skilled at because I absolutely hated it. Though hearing what I've been told when I left, I would have probably made it to the top and have had "success". I was also helping people not get their money stolen on fake electronic scams, so you could say I was making a difference in people's lives.
    I ran away from "success". Why? Because I was about to kill myself if I stayed there.
    Honestly, I believe the best success you can have, is living a life you actually want to live. And there's just no objective way to calculate this

    • @stijn4771
      @stijn4771 Před 7 lety +22

      Steven Thanks for the advice. What do you do now?

    • @RodHammett95
      @RodHammett95 Před 7 lety +182

      "I believe the best success you can have, is living a life you actually want to live."
      Give this man a cookie!

    • @user-jd1hy9bg1d
      @user-jd1hy9bg1d Před 5 lety +15

      I DON'T WANT ANYTHING. GUESS I'LL GO KILL MYSELF THAN..

    • @cainandabel7059
      @cainandabel7059 Před 5 lety +26

      @@user-jd1hy9bg1d
      You can always work and do just something you enjoy while off work( like watching movies, reading or gaming or just listening to music)

    • @chips_a_huy
      @chips_a_huy Před 4 lety +7

      this touched me. thank you.

  • @Je_suis_Jefe
    @Je_suis_Jefe Před 7 lety +5245

    You could be passionate with something and be horrible at it at the same time.

    • @codemiesterbeats
      @codemiesterbeats Před 7 lety +237

      lmao true true... I still suck at music but im still at it.

    • @santh9115
      @santh9115 Před 7 lety +339

      a lot of artists are terrible at it and make tons of money, you'll be fine

    • @jeannewambo5150
      @jeannewambo5150 Před 7 lety +52

      yeah just like many singers out there...No comment!

    • @lysekthe
      @lysekthe Před 7 lety +27

      yep, he didn't consider, that someone is passionate in some area, but he not have talent for this in the same time. Ex. musician, sportsman's

    • @hdee5615
      @hdee5615 Před 7 lety +52

      lysekthe wel thats where you need to put in the hours to learn it..and thats the problem..everyone wants something but dont want to work for it.. rich people didnt get rich by sitting on there ass.. they did something about it..and invested time and money into the things they were weak at..

  • @emmamorgan2002
    @emmamorgan2002 Před 3 lety +2497

    I think what he's trying to say is just don't blindly follow your "passion" or interests as a career. Rather you should incorporate your passion(s) into a career that doesn't only benefit you. I just started going to college for interior design and honestly am still not sure if this is really what i want to do. I care a lot about the environment and feel like a career involving that would possibly be better. With that in mind I could easily become an interior designer who uses only recycled and sustainable materials for my projects and could inspire others to do so as well. The question I'm left with is "is that doing enough for the environment to me?"

    • @vivianadenegri6148
      @vivianadenegri6148 Před 3 lety +128

      I think this is a really cool ieda. I can't think of any affordable brand for interior that is also sustainable so I would be interested. I personally have an interest in fashion plus I also really care for the environment. I was thinking of having an ethical fashion brand or consulting people on how to find their style and things tht suit them and make them happy while in a way also doing something for the envosinment? Idk I have no idea

    • @KLKLKLKLKLKLKLKLKLmf
      @KLKLKLKLKLKLKLKLKLmf Před 3 lety +49

      If you do that, it would be inspiring.

    • @someundeadtalent2016
      @someundeadtalent2016 Před 3 lety +88

      I totally feel you! I am currently in an apprenticeship as a professional car painter but I realised all the waste and toxic chemicals touched me. How can we improve the running system? Make it more sustainable?
      After some research I found out I could start with another apprenticeship building up on my current one, which would help me learn about how paint works and how people create it. With that, I could go into big companies like BASF and help evolve the current system of paints and polishes, making it more sustainable.

    • @adri-bee1268
      @adri-bee1268 Před 3 lety +14

      @@someundeadtalent2016 in my city there is a big shop for sustainable paints. Maybe you can also find something like that and learn from them, too.
      (what I want to say is that sustainable options already exist... but probably not for engines)

    • @heresy_joy
      @heresy_joy Před 3 lety +15

      Don't let (reasonable) doubts stop you. I think it's the perfect idea which you can start to make the difference with!

  • @louisehelgesson5471
    @louisehelgesson5471 Před 3 lety +544

    I didn’t even watch the TED talk. I just read the comments 😂

  • @horrorpill
    @horrorpill Před 7 lety +714

    "The only way to do great work is to love what you do. If you haven't found it yet, keep looking. Don't settle. As with all the matters of the heart, you'll know it when you find it." - Steve Jobs (1955-2011).

  • @pixxie643
    @pixxie643 Před 4 lety +1912

    "Don't ask yourself what the world needs. Ask what makes you come alive and go do that. Because what the world needs is people who have come alive." - Howard Thurman
    For some people, finding a career that has meaning and makes the world a better place is what makes them happy but for others, following their passion is the right move. There is no set in stone way to find the right career for you, it is not wrong to pursue money or practicality nor is it wrong to pursue your creative passion. You have to find your own path through life.

    • @neptune0909
      @neptune0909 Před 3 lety +9

      💯

    • @Yolwoocle
      @Yolwoocle Před 3 lety +19

      This is absolutely true!

    • @diiana_aiupova
      @diiana_aiupova Před 3 lety +50

      Oh god I think you cured my depression

    • @corysgood881
      @corysgood881 Před 3 lety +17

      Thank you for posting this comment. Anyone who wants to explore this further I highly suggest you read "Claim Your Power" by Mastin Kipp, this is basically the goal of that book. If you don't enjoy the process of the work one day you will wake up tired of your job and it will hit you hard like it did me! I just hope that you don't let to many years slip away before you have this realization.

    • @Muting_all_advice
      @Muting_all_advice Před 3 lety +8

      Sure, but most people need to be independently wealthy to do what makes them come alive, since what makes us as individuals come alive doesn’t necessarily have a market. Right? We can’t force others to pay for our own preferred careers. As the talker pointed out, lots of people want to do the same exiting things.

  • @riyascorner9198
    @riyascorner9198 Před 3 lety +1015

    “The job you find boring was someone else’s dream job”

    • @rizqikhoirunnisa3801
      @rizqikhoirunnisa3801 Před 3 lety +91

      And sometimes people say to me that I have to be grateful of, but they dont know what exactly I feel

    • @sissi18
      @sissi18 Před 3 lety +93

      Yes, sure, but it was not my dream.. Everyone has differents dreams..

    • @captain_cloudd
      @captain_cloudd Před 3 lety +8

      and?

    • @ggundercover3681
      @ggundercover3681 Před 3 lety +20

      @@captain_cloudd for me the quote just put it into perspective. isn't so funny how a job I possibly hate and dread, could be someone else's light of the day? I didn't interpret it as stating you should be grateful (I can't read tone in text and didn't feel the need to find some negative meaning). However, you are correct, if someone tells you this in order to dismiss your unhappiness, please ignore and keep searching for fulfilment.

    • @mattheww4019
      @mattheww4019 Před 3 lety +7

      gotta disagree with this comment, everyone's different and this quote doesn't solve the problem of why people came to this video

  • @Hexanitrobenzene
    @Hexanitrobenzene Před 3 lety +134

    Something tells me that when he was "passionate" about martial arts and philosophy, he didn't know himself well.
    His true passion is helping others, and he is fulfilling it by working in a charity.
    Passion and happiness are very subjective words with many meanings. Naturally, confusion arises when using them.
    I think what he is really trying to say is this: "Don't simply follow your interests which bring you pleasure and joy (note: I'm not using the word 'happiness', it is something a lot more permanent than joy). Instead, do something you really *care* about. Something you care about will probably be hard and tedious, but it will be worth it, because it will be meaningful."

  • @aafaqs
    @aafaqs Před 6 lety +269

    Your Passion - What’s valuable = ❌
    What’s valuable - Your Passion = ❌
    Your Passion + What’s valuable = ✔️

  • @ambergrubenmann9111
    @ambergrubenmann9111 Před 7 lety +366

    Comparing the number of people who say their passion is something creative to the number of jobs available in the creative field is disempowering. Statistics like these teach young people to wait until they are chosen, or wait on others to create opportunities for them, instead of challenging themselves to create the conditions they desire on their own. Young people are waiting to be accepted by a good school and then hoping to be hired after an interview. Doing and saying the right things all their lives with the hopes that someone will choose them out of the crowd. Dear young people, don't wait on someone to call on you, create value without permission. With tools like CZcams, Facebook, Instagram, Wordpress, etc. You can do it for free and you can start today.

    • @rebeckasvensson838
      @rebeckasvensson838 Před 7 lety +17

      THIS is inspiring!

    • @luciairaola825
      @luciairaola825 Před 7 lety +2

      Amber Grubenmann uuuuuuuuhhhhh

    • @einarabelc5
      @einarabelc5 Před 7 lety

      Totally, that's what THEY want you to believe. Why do you think this "talk" is in this channel, it's talk.

    • @emilyjackson1819
      @emilyjackson1819 Před 7 lety

      Amber Grubenmann what do you mean tools like CZcams and Facebook?

    • @SamyaDaleh
      @SamyaDaleh Před 7 lety +6

      You can create art and share it via CZcams or Facebook. There are good chances that someone sees it who finds value in it.

  • @sockysworld8010
    @sockysworld8010 Před 3 lety +615

    Trick yourself into pursuing value, while secretly following your passion.

  • @emox9
    @emox9 Před 3 lety +156

    It’s just his point of view, don’t let the others tell you what to do in your life, follow your dreams, fail, fall down in pieces, rise up again and never give up. There’s no only one path, you may end up finding a new path for your life. So do things, try, explore, and you will discover yourself!

  • @BestMentalism
    @BestMentalism Před 7 lety +4254

    martial arts and philosophy were the 2 main interests of another guy: Bruce Lee, and then he matched it with what was valuable for people: movies, and he became a true legend. I believe it's a question of balance, you have to find what you are interested in and then how you can use it to bring value to others.

    • @sue-sageasmr2020
      @sue-sageasmr2020 Před 7 lety +77

      Best Mentalism well said!

    • @el_kks_4361
      @el_kks_4361 Před 7 lety +1

      +

    • @enzo_armani
      @enzo_armani Před 7 lety +15

      nothing to add..

    • @Francis-zk3io
      @Francis-zk3io Před 7 lety

      TY !

    • @GregTom2
      @GregTom2 Před 7 lety +240

      Martial arts and philosophy were the 2 main interests of hundreds of thousands of people. Don't take a sample size of one person.

  • @iangilbert7722
    @iangilbert7722 Před 7 lety +1636

    Following your passion is fine, if you're good at it and if there's a market for it.

    • @Ekitchi0
      @Ekitchi0 Před 7 lety +71

      so basically if your passion is about something valuable ;)

    • @jerrymate5151
      @jerrymate5151 Před 7 lety +60

      Ian Gilbert as long as your passion has nothing to do with arts, you'll be fine

    • @WateryFire
      @WateryFire Před 7 lety +25

      Ekitchi Hoshi Not everything that's on the market is valuable.

    • @Ekitchi0
      @Ekitchi0 Před 7 lety +31

      Prelestnost2 How so? If there is a market for something, it means there are people willing to pay for it, hence it's valuable.

    • @WateryFire
      @WateryFire Před 7 lety +25

      Ekitchi Hoshi
      Interesting definition of valuable. I don't think though that's what the presenter meant as valuable.

  • @maeghanmondelo18
    @maeghanmondelo18 Před 3 lety +48

    This reminds me of the movie Soul. When the idk what creature she was said "Your spark is not your purpose" really hit me hard.

  • @perfectmoments3876
    @perfectmoments3876 Před 3 lety +35

    5 Years ago this guy helped me choose my career, and I could´nt be more thankful. Do what´s valuable!

    • @PedroMachadoPT
      @PedroMachadoPT Před 3 lety +2

      No. Do what you are most valueable at relative to others.

  • @pistopit7142
    @pistopit7142 Před 4 lety +819

    Once your passion becomes your job, it stops being so passionating over time.

    • @Brunette909
      @Brunette909 Před 3 lety +32

      Really? Did you experience it? I would appreciate if you answer honestly 🙂

    • @Izik8890
      @Izik8890 Před 3 lety +54

      I had that. I worked as an actress in a travelling theatre for 5 years. All the stuff I love - performance, costumes, circus. By the end I needed a change. Now I can afford to say no to a performance if I don't feel like it. I am not afraid of making things how I like them because I am not worried about future bookings. Now again I am in a job which involves things I really enjoy - DIY, fixing stuff, etc. At the end of the day I don't feel like doing it at home although I need it! But.. I do know a chef who loves his work and the first thing he does when he comes home is cook dinner for his family with a giant smile on his face! So it doesn't apply to everyone. Greetings

    • @francescoantolini8752
      @francescoantolini8752 Před 3 lety +9

      i agreee with you because you must to do that like a job. it means when it is necessary to do it and not when you want to enjoy it

    • @Mira12963
      @Mira12963 Před 3 lety +13

      @@Brunette909 It’s a lot more frustrating having a customer or boss tell me how to go about my passion than “just my job”. However at the end of the day they’re the ones signing the paycheck + unless you’re a complete enthusiast you’ll likely be full of doing the thing 24/7. I for example work at a gym and I barely ever go to a gym class in my free time because it feels like work and takes away the excitement.
      Lastly tapping back into the video’s message: our coaches (including myself) enjoy getting paid for sports but what we *love* is helping the customers reach their goals and having an impact there. If it wasn’t for them I wouldn’t enjoy it quite as much. So it’s possible to combine it but not in every case.
      Also apparently writing long paragraphs on YT is a passion of mine too lol

    • @jd3076
      @jd3076 Před 3 lety +6

      Kinda make sense tho in simple terms "its fun in the beginning but kinda get tiring when time passes by" but that doesnt mean you lost interest in your passion

  • @brunodays
    @brunodays Před 7 lety +321

    I mean... If you follow your passion there is sure to be people who'll benefit from it. Not just you. And if you build your career from a passion you'll either see how you were wrong... Or you'll grow to love what you do each and every day.
    Not everyone is the same.
    And like someone once said, make your passion a career and you won't have to work at all.
    Also, if you follow his advice and do something intricately more valuable for the world and start loving what you do... You found another passion.
    Because a person doesn't have a single interest, a single passion, a single thing they love.
    We as human beings are ever evolving, ever changing. If we can find happiness doing something we have found a passion. An interest. And that's the beauty of it.

    • @brunodays
      @brunodays Před 7 lety +22

      XGamingProductionsX and you sound like a moron trying to be smart.
      if some people didn't follow their passions we wouldn't have half of the amazing things we have today. do you think all top scientists just "went for it"? do you think our best cinematographers/producers didn't have a passion for film when they started?
      do you think most people become musicians or any sort of artist "just because"?
      if you happen to have followed your passion and have regreted it, then I'm sorry for you.
      But don't pass on your negativity like that.

    • @Dr.HowieFeltersnatch
      @Dr.HowieFeltersnatch Před 7 lety

      BDAYZ Yeah I do think that half of them "went for it". Probably more than half. and honestly, art, music, movies, really don't matter.

    • @brunodays
      @brunodays Před 7 lety +3

      XGamingProductionsX well then we'll have to disagree

    • @fabioparra2711
      @fabioparra2711 Před 7 lety +5

      This comment made my day.

    • @uhsbwyhwj2966
      @uhsbwyhwj2966 Před 7 lety +7

      Dr. Howie Feltersnatch you're an idiot

  • @lauramanthey7095
    @lauramanthey7095 Před 3 lety +20

    I love the idea that our work lives have a deeper meaning. Don't just focus on making money and being 'successful'. Looking for work that is valuable and will make a real difference in the world is priceless!

  • @DashieLovesMe
    @DashieLovesMe Před 3 lety +40

    I think it’s all about finding a career you give value to the most. Because all careers are valuable, we just need people who are actually interested in that. That’s what makes a valuable career.

    • @oppen637
      @oppen637 Před 4 měsíci

      Why should there be only one career?

  • @dil-lw1gj
    @dil-lw1gj Před 3 lety +2411

    Damn the comment section here is more motivational than the video

  • @manny3095
    @manny3095 Před 7 lety +610

    Follow your passion, don't follow your passion. fuck! fuck I say! you all have to realize that their is absolutely no RIGHT answer for this conundrum. what you do is pick something, and make that choice the RIGHT choice.

    • @pedrohenriquecostamendes8969
      @pedrohenriquecostamendes8969 Před 7 lety +14

      The best comment on this video so far! Don't know why there is no attention to it yet!

    • @applecrave1097
      @applecrave1097 Před 7 lety +1

      Exactly!

    • @devitamayasari4794
      @devitamayasari4794 Před 7 lety +11

      really? you should try to be in TedTalks too i guess

    • @bea855
      @bea855 Před 7 lety +1

      completely agree!!

    • @brunodays
      @brunodays Před 7 lety +17

      Manny Singh As vague as that is, you're right.
      Like I said in a comment I made, "if you find happiness doing something you have found a passion"
      We don't need to follow a passion. We can create one, as we are ever changing.

  • @manoma7
    @manoma7 Před 2 lety +74

    The “Earth” without “art” is just “eh”

  • @stefaniecarina1115
    @stefaniecarina1115 Před 3 lety +109

    I don't get why the majority of comments are negative. I get his "helping others" point. It might not be the only value in finding your job, but one important part of it.

    • @DavidsonLoops
      @DavidsonLoops Před 3 lety

      Obvs it needs to be taken with a pinch of salt, as he said in the last decades the careers advice was different, maybe he was only talking about his orgs most recent state of their research but are still working on it, he should have mentioned that actually.

    • @justsumdude7437
      @justsumdude7437 Před 3 lety +1

      You're under no obligation to direct your life towards something altruistic.
      Helping people is good, obviously, but that doesn't mean you're ought to give up your passion just to be useful.

  • @dorro4813
    @dorro4813 Před 7 lety +685

    You don't have enough motivation without passion, you can't do something valuable, something really qaulitative without passion. Our brains don't work well with things that they don't like.

    • @Ekitchi0
      @Ekitchi0 Před 7 lety +26

      He did say present passions are a factor in choosing what skills to get good at precisely for that reason.
      Basically, he is saying that passion is good for building skills, not so much for full careers, because our interests do change over time.

    • @adorkable7196
      @adorkable7196 Před 7 lety +35

      but passion and interest aren't the same thing. Interests change, passion doesn't.

    • @StarMiely
      @StarMiely Před 7 lety +8

      Ador kable Passion is a feeling, so I guess it can change?

    • @jeannewambo5150
      @jeannewambo5150 Před 7 lety +7

      I agree with you! You can turn into a genie whyle doing things you like...You never complain, never give up, you think of it days long...You would die doing it....If you fail then you just did it wrong...It's not because you fail that it means you'll never succeed...And it's not because you look for a job that you'd succeed on it...

    • @jeannewambo5150
      @jeannewambo5150 Před 7 lety +31

      I'd rather fail doing something I like than doing a shitty job...

  • @taylenday
    @taylenday Před 7 lety +1095

    Fuck it. I'm going for it anyway.

    • @LOLIPOP00007
      @LOLIPOP00007 Před 7 lety +1

      XXTALEN otrw

    • @Adam-bq2vw
      @Adam-bq2vw Před 7 lety +32

      I just don't understand how it's so clear cut to some ppl. Nothing in my life is that obvious. There are many different things I'm interested in.

    • @taylenday
      @taylenday Před 7 lety +9

      It's not that it's clear cut. You just think about it critically. Then emotionally. And if theres not at least some kind of winner among your interests you just pick one and stick to it for as long as possible.

    • @rachelwheaton6730
      @rachelwheaton6730 Před 7 lety +6

      XXTALEN go for it! What's your passion?

    • @awesomegamer31
      @awesomegamer31 Před 7 lety +3

      +XXTALEN best of luck mate

  • @yantxgsstory
    @yantxgsstory Před 3 lety +332

    Your passions don’t need to become your main, full-time job !!!

    • @Vin_parker007
      @Vin_parker007 Před 3 lety +24

      Exactly many peoples nowdays skip hard work in means of following passion which is not yet practical for themselves. Our generation is full of confusion cause ideas were many and that's big problem. So i guess what's needed is the best thing and i wish making a difference is a worth it only when we make out peace and stability wirh our fundamental needs of living

    • @gopikaravisankar
      @gopikaravisankar Před 3 lety +1

      @@Vin_parker007True 👍

    • @SCIENCEnENGINEER
      @SCIENCEnENGINEER Před 3 lety

      Correct!

    • @nnnn-ub2lb
      @nnnn-ub2lb Před 3 lety

      What about someone passionate about medecine, how it can be not my full time job ? If it's not my full time job it be also not my job at all .

    • @yantxgsstory
      @yantxgsstory Před 3 lety +7

      @@nnnn-ub2lb i believe if it’s something youre truly passionate about but cant have as a full time job, you will FIND ways to incorporate it into your life. Examples of that include: making CZcams educational videos/Instagram pages/Facebook groups etc, part time teacher/lecturer, or even writing reports and researching just for the fun of it! (And even writing a book!)

  • @dakshnair5550
    @dakshnair5550 Před 2 lety +14

    It changed my perspective forever. Being a teen it was important for me to choose a career. This video was suggested by another career advisor who helped us choose our career. I wanted to become a doctor the whole time but he made me reconsider that. Thank you Benjamin Todd for opening my eyes!

  • @idfengming
    @idfengming Před 7 lety +973

    My passion is not to work

  • @ljubav5630
    @ljubav5630 Před 4 lety +1543

    A world without art would be worthless for so many people

    • @ahmedabdulrahman3490
      @ahmedabdulrahman3490 Před 4 lety +17

      Anna R I really want to understand that why art is so important than other really helpful and meaningful things .. I see all artist musicians actors CZcamsrs etc.. they are famous and rich .. popular .. so that mean it will make your life better than being a scientist or a doctor which working a lot of time with pressure and cheep salaries just that help them live and so .. should that mean we should be more ppl time killers ..

    • @TheSamasi
      @TheSamasi Před 4 lety +22

      For me that would be the case without no musicians

    • @jolleh
      @jolleh Před 4 lety +76

      @@TheSamasi music is the only perfect thing mankind ever invented

    • @gashy5526
      @gashy5526 Před 4 lety +98

      @@ahmedabdulrahman3490 What it means is art is essentially 'entertainment', like video games, animation, cartoons, journalism/content, publishing, and is a fundamental in architecture, design, product design, fashion etc etc. Without art as a basis we would have no way of expression, entertainment or advancement in technology especially with things like product design and architecture.

    • @rollerblader5350
      @rollerblader5350 Před 3 lety +73

      Art is the ONLY IRREPLACEABLE thing in the future

  • @DLeo14
    @DLeo14 Před rokem +27

    Without following your passion to some extent, you'll end up doing a lot of jobs that you hate and being exploited, but you may not find what you're truly passionate about until you try a bunch of different things, and just gain more life experience in general.

  • @user-ig9wk3jy9j
    @user-ig9wk3jy9j Před 2 lety +20

    The thing I learned from this video is that don't delay our decision before we know our passion is but to do valuable things and just explore as much as we can. Even if we can't find our own real passion after many tries, we can still live a valuable life.

  • @denizgul6131
    @denizgul6131 Před 7 lety +34

    My passion is science and technology, lucky me

  • @Celeyo
    @Celeyo Před 6 lety +2273

    I'm sure this is true for some people, but I'm just sitting here laughing because the thing I regret is not following my passion earlier. I've wanted to make a living as an artist for over a decade, and somewhere along the line I decided that it was too unreasonable and wouldn't bring in any money, so I started studying other things, thinking I could be a translator, a geologist or something else more "realistic". But I couldn't ever give up art. I always felt incredibly unhappy I couldn't spend more time and energy on it. And due to both that, and to things in my personal life, I ended up with depression, anxiety and a severe burnout that I still haven't recovered from. The only reason I'm slowly getting back on my feet is because I'm now allowing myself to truly follow my passion.
    So yeaaahhh, I probably wouldn't give people the advice to not follow their passion. Tbh.

    • @mariamiase8977
      @mariamiase8977 Před 5 lety +182

      Here I am, with the same story. I always had passion for the piano and art. I decided to study Sociology, because it seemed to be more realistic career-wise, I was interested in Sociology as well, but later, I guessed that I had interest for many things, but passion for art and the piano. Interest and passion are two different things. I am struggling with anxiety as well, but starting to try my best and work on my skills and passion. Good luck and I really hope that people like us will follow what they truly love.

    • @hadiyahasma9440
      @hadiyahasma9440 Před 5 lety +121

      Wish I could hug every one of you who has this same story as mine. I also haven’t recovered from all the anger and other mental instability that I’ve developed during those days I was unable to pursue art. Been in a better place now walking baby step and finally feeling happy after years of asphyxiation. Best wishes for all of us :)

    • @meganruhnke3962
      @meganruhnke3962 Před 5 lety +56

      Celeyo I feel the same way too if I’m not doing art then I get really depressed. I think ppl should do what they know and are good at. That way you are able to better contribute to society and art plays an important part on culture and the generation you live in.

    • @Gokai_
      @Gokai_ Před 5 lety +77

      I think what he tries to say is that your interest might not be the only source you use to choose. You also have to combine it with something more valuable. In fact he said it isnt likely that you become an artist but only because they arent many jobs. His idea is more like, look at your skills and use them for others. If you are skilled in arts then go for it but dont do any arts but arts that help people: motivational or go into something like design.

    • @tommihorttana860
      @tommihorttana860 Před 5 lety +58

      I, too, think the advice comes off too one-sided. I had various passions as a kid, one being computers and the other being writing, with talent in mathmatics as well. I went after a mixture of both in media arts, and have now been working as a freelance game developer. This has been enjoyable and decent for earning money, but I could no doubt earn more working on Google algorithms or something. But the passion hasn't gone away - in fact it's not even quite satisfied by doing freelance work for others, and I'm seriously considering taking a couple of years off and doing an indie game of my own.
      On the other hand, my original plan, and the obvious choice for someone with a passion in writing, was to become a novelist. Looking back, I think I would have been mediocre at best. I was good at it but not top-tier, and would have probably not been able to make a living off it, especially considering how hard it is even for successful writers to earn money. If I have any special talent, it's the combination of writing and math-based logical thinking and problem-solving, and now I'm in a good position to pursue that eventually.
      The advice of doing something valuable for others is also solid. The motivation to create games comes, in big part, from other people enjoying them. I am more skeptical about the idea that simply earning to give would make you happy, though. The value for others is too impersonal and disconnected from the actual work.
      So maybe better advice would be to not *obsess* about finding your passion - if you have one, you already know it. And to not *ignore* these other considerations when making your decision.

  • @kapcsolatkulcs
    @kapcsolatkulcs Před 3 lety +3

    I'm 48 now, I lead a community house and an NGO. That became my passion, my way and after this few minutes video I feel tranquility. I see now, how wonderful thoughts are appearing from the next generation's minds. The future is in your hands and minds, young friends - and altrusitic stage of self is one of the best and most valuable way of living. Just let yorself be open for the opportunities. Love,

  • @OneRandomLeo
    @OneRandomLeo Před 3 lety +7

    "Do what's valuable" is great advice! Now, it is also true that people have very different and sometimes opposing ideas on what is valuable or purposeful, but maybe if we all do what we think is valuable, we can appreciate and respect others for what they are doing. They believe in their own cause as much as you believe in yours.

  • @KingLoki95
    @KingLoki95 Před 7 lety +140

    To all those here who're now confused as to whether or not they should follow their passion- I'd just like to share a Jim Carrey quote from his commencement speech (which I recommend everyone to watch at least once).
    " You CAN fail at something you don't like. So why not take a risk at something you love? "

    • @Daniel-ey8lb
      @Daniel-ey8lb Před 5 lety +2

      Thanks this helped a lot

    • @Atasych
      @Atasych Před 4 lety +5

      Elon Musk replies: "When something is important enough, you do it even if the odds are not in your favor."
      Thus, meaning can be more important than passion. If you fail at least you know you tried to do something not egoistic but meaningful and others will learn from you to get there. Jim Carrey did wonderful and meaningful thing promoting Eckhart Tolle's Advaita Vedanta books for example. Sadhguru said "If you succeed in achieving your goal within your life it means that your goal was too small."

  • @ArchDemonNar
    @ArchDemonNar Před 7 lety +183

    A lot of the dissenters here seem to be under the impression that most people have a singular passion in life that never changes. Passion is a fleeting emotion for the majority of people, and cannot be relied on for fulfillment over the course of their entire life. I think that people who know, without a doubt, what their sole passion in life is from an early age are very lucky. Put yourself in a position where you can follow your passions as they arise, while keeping a healthy balance between them and personal finance and responsibility. The do whatever it takes mentality could mean it's acceptable to abandon your children in the pursuit of your passion career, it's ridiculous, but logically sound. There are poorly defined lines between where following your passion begins and ends, or where they should begin and end. What he and others are saying, is that they started doing something that worked, and lo and behold, it became their passion. This advice is great for people who struggle to to find what their purpose in life is supposed to be. Someone mentioned he could have become Bruce Lee from his martial arts and philosophy interests. But if the world were to see ten men like him, even if they were marginally superior, subsequently they would each become less interesting to us. Since each would make less of an impact than the one before him, it would likely cause them to feel less fulfilled, and be less successful. I had a passion for being in a band and playing music once, I put everything I had into it and ended up realizing that I actually prefer it as a hobby and would have hated being on a tour bus being in different places all the time. Most people don't have limitless resources to fully dive into each passion they have. Sometimes a person has to stick with what they've got and make the best of it, which most likely would come from finding a solution to a problem in that field and sharing it, as this speaker suggests.

    • @PhuongNguyen-wr3vh
      @PhuongNguyen-wr3vh Před 7 lety +23

      Totally agree! You gave the most mindful comment here. This video is for the majority of people living in this world. Some people want their passion so bad that they can mentally and physically go through any adversity to make their deam become a reality, these people, well, are sports stars or great actors and so on. But the fact is that these great people belong to just a small group compared to the whole population, and we can't apply what works for the minority to the majority.
      So I think that "follow your dream" and "don't follow your dream" are both true, depending on each person's situation. While many people have followed their dream and then become great, there are still many people who did follow their dream and then ended up with nothing. Another thing is those people who completely understand what they want and willing to work hard to get it wouldn't waste time to click on videos like this one right after they read the title.
      Anyway, each individual is the cause of everything that happens in their life, so they should be careful what they wish for, because passion sometimes can be deceiving though.

    • @silverandexact
      @silverandexact Před 7 lety

      +

    • @pyrpyr5Wolf
      @pyrpyr5Wolf Před 7 lety +19

      As one of the minority group I'll just have to correct one thing, a passion is not a fleeting emotion, but an interest can be. A passion means you burn for it, you'd do anyting just to get to do that one thing every day. It's not a "oh i want to be a superstar and rich" feeling/thought more like "I need to show this amazing thing to the rest of the world, because how can they live without knowing of it?" whether that be music or as in my case wildlife conservation. If you have a passion, you're not in doubt, because nothing gives you more pure happiness than following it, and yes it's hard to stand out from the crowds that has the same interest, but if you're the passionate one, you're willing to go that extra forty miles to get there!

    • @ArchDemonNar
      @ArchDemonNar Před 7 lety

      I suppose you may be right, thank you for that perspective on the word choice.

    • @EmilioKolomenski
      @EmilioKolomenski Před 7 lety +6

      +pyrpyr5Wolf You can't reasonably expect everyone (not even a big minority in some areas) that has a passion to stand out, because that's not how standing out works. It's just a circular argument where anytime something has lots of people being passionate about it, competence for it skyrockets, generating stand outs that "define" the new "passion baseline": Everyone who didn't stand out didn't do so because they didn't run the extra forty miles (i.e. "they weren't passionate enough about it"). That's just ludicrous.
      Sometimes people are passionate about things they won't stand out in. It's how life in a 7 billion inhabitants world works, and we should start trying to go around it in a healthy way instead of making excuses like "it wasn't really a passion" or "you should have invested more time".

  • @WaaDoku
    @WaaDoku Před 3 lety +11

    This is a talk every high school student should get to hear. Although I can't help but think this kind of advice is most valuable for a very specific type of person.

  • @lightlawliet3526
    @lightlawliet3526 Před 3 lety +366

    so this is the ten year old kid with twenty-two years of work experience.

    • @DavidsonLoops
      @DavidsonLoops Před 3 lety +15

      Aha now i know how those companies ask for experience

    • @moymoythehappymonkey3155
      @moymoythehappymonkey3155 Před 3 lety +25

      Companies: I want a single person to do the jobs of 10 people.
      Salary: half the value of a single person.

    • @jessicamessica2271
      @jessicamessica2271 Před 3 lety +4

      Lmao. I looked at him and was like is a 16 year old giving me career advice...

  • @sartanko
    @sartanko Před 7 lety +61

    For me, when I take the career and money out of the question and just ask "what do I want to do" it becomes much easier.

    • @RosesAndIvy
      @RosesAndIvy Před 7 lety +9

      For me that makes it harder, because there are so many things i want to do! So I ask myself, what do I want to do that is valuable to society and has job opportunities?

    • @sartanko
      @sartanko Před 7 lety +2

      Renate vd Bent
      You can do more than one thing.

    • @AWanderingEye
      @AWanderingEye Před 7 lety

      Dan Slash But, you have to start somewhere and it may mean gaining specialized knowledge so while you could do many things, they won't be very diverse...there are only so many hours in the day. in the end a choice needs to be made and you have to live with it and develop mastery. Most career paths are just that, not a lot of jumping around from field to field. Those are the exception.

    • @bob1503
      @bob1503 Před 6 lety +4

      I wanna eat, and sleep.

  • @robertotellez3142
    @robertotellez3142 Před 3 lety +255

    After watching most of the video and reading some of the comments, I get that everyone has their own experience, you can't base what you want to study on numbers, there's no secret formula, you just have to live and figure your own life out, everybody gets a different outcome, and at the end, they all just did their thing.

  • @pedroramos5477
    @pedroramos5477 Před rokem +5

    Very good! For someone like me, with some personal experience in following a passion, this talk is remarkably accurate. The only advice i can give, is that in hindsight, when we are young we are blinded by our passion, so the best is probably go out and do it, and not be moaning the rest of the life about not having tried. Eventually we will get there, with the insightful help of people like Benjamin Todd.

  • @septanine5936
    @septanine5936 Před rokem +62

    I think the real problem is trying to make it a one size fits all situation. I think people should do something they're good at and at least somewhat enjoy doing, or forge their own path even. This could be a passion or not. I think those that follow their passion should expect unenjoyable aspects as well as enjoyable ones. Just do something that you won't dread doing all the time. You know you best after all.

    • @uRealReels
      @uRealReels Před rokem +1

      what is it that you dont dread, lol [ ie what do u do, and how does it make u feel]

    • @septanine5936
      @septanine5936 Před rokem +2

      @uRealReals I don't dread creating, whether that's a picture on a piece of paper, a sculpture, or a scarf. it makes me feel accomplished and is a way for me to express myself. sometimes execution can be frustrating, but it's worth it for me

  • @n_evermore
    @n_evermore Před 4 lety +1124

    For any fellow artists out there who feels somewhat discouraged by this Ted Talk, don't be, because art can have great impact on other people as well. I believe that we should do our best in maintaining a balance between following our passion, creating inspiration for other people, and also having a realistic yet hopeful perspective towards the world we live in, all of them are important in my opinion. Benjamin made some good points, but they're a bit flawed to be fair.

    • @nzhnaz
      @nzhnaz Před 4 lety +6

      Agreed :)

    • @GameToony
      @GameToony Před 4 lety +59

      Nice way of putting it. A lot of people hold the pursuit of their passion with such pride that if they think someone contradicts them they get defensive. I don't think the point of the talk was to discourage people from following their passions, but to help them find their passions through altruism

    • @adii8819
      @adii8819 Před 4 lety +41

      now I see that a lot of people don't really understand his point. Pls watch at 13:11 he did mention that arts is useful. He never said arts is useless and cannot impact the world.

    • @n_evermore
      @n_evermore Před 4 lety +29

      @@adii8819 I apologize for the late response. Yes, he did mention that. But for some reason, some people in the comment section were somewhat discouraged, assuming that they took it the wrong way, so I thought that I'd say something about it.

    • @neptune0909
      @neptune0909 Před 3 lety +2

      @@n_evermore 💯

  • @BlaxicanBeautyTV333
    @BlaxicanBeautyTV333 Před 7 lety +813

    As a college kid (only first year) I almost fell for what this dude was saying but I have so many passions, if I gave up on them my life would be over.

    • @conormclaughlan772
      @conormclaughlan772 Před 7 lety +93

      Maryam Rodgers this guy just wasnt passionate enough about what he thought his passions were, therefore he quit, but if you love something enough you wouldnt!

    • @sophiejones7727
      @sophiejones7727 Před 7 lety +95

      that's not true at all. I am very passionate about music, but no way would I ever be a professional musician. I do not have the patience or stamina for that kind of life. I need a structured, nine-to-five workday thank you very much. Knowing what career would be a good fit for you is about knowing your skills and personality traits: not solely about knowing your desires or interests.
      That said, +Maryam Rodgers there is no need to give up on your passions. I sing in a chorus and play the violin for my family. I go to concerts whenever I can, and listen to lots of music here on youtube. There is nothing wrong with making time for the things you love even if those things are not necessarily what you choose to do for your career.

    • @BlaxicanBeautyTV333
      @BlaxicanBeautyTV333 Před 7 lety +45

      Sophie Jones I see, but I'm the type of person who would go crazy in a 9-5 job, I need adventure and variety.

    • @jean_cpdv
      @jean_cpdv Před 7 lety +26

      Maryam Rodgers There are so many jobs in the world ! it's not because it doesn't match your "passion" (something i am not sure everybody have) that it's not an adventure or full of variety. What he is trying to say is not give up on what makes you happy, he says that helping each others seems to be the true pass for our hapiness.

    • @BlaxicanBeautyTV333
      @BlaxicanBeautyTV333 Před 7 lety

      Conor Mclaughlan Right

  • @karthigah_careerguru
    @karthigah_careerguru Před rokem +2

    I watched this 2 years ago. When I was lost and clueless about my career. Now I know what I want to do. What is my purpose. Thank you so much.

  • @madzia_801
    @madzia_801 Před měsícem +1

    It was LITERALLY what I needed to hear since a year ago. I chose a major that followed my passion, although I felt like something was off. I felt that it was no use.
    Now I’m changing my major… finally knowing how to choose.

  • @rick2402
    @rick2402 Před 8 lety +98

    Benjamin's contention is that if you do what's valuable, passion will follow. This argument can be broken by finding a simple counterexample. I'm sure that everyone knows someone in their life that is doing financially well but feels very unfulfilled and dead inside. I argue that these examples are what led to the "Follow your passion" advice in the first place. Many people in the world don't want to make that mistake. I think that people should follow their passion, AND generate value through it in some way.

    • @charlessmith8854
      @charlessmith8854 Před 7 lety +2

      What?

    • @charlessmith8854
      @charlessmith8854 Před 7 lety

      ***** you followed what the op was saying? It's like ripping a random page off of the Bible and sticking it in random spot in Moby Dick and reading the page in its new context. What?

    • @madnirab2341
      @madnirab2341 Před 7 lety +1

      Both

    • @ETFsinner
      @ETFsinner Před 7 lety +1

      what

    • @xDMrGarrison
      @xDMrGarrison Před 7 lety +5

      Lol this even got 10 likes. By "valuable" he means something that will have a positive impact on other people. Not "doing financially well"

  • @samo5717
    @samo5717 Před 7 lety +110

    What if his passion is to secretly waste everyones time by telling them to not follow their passions, while he's being hypocritical following his passion.

  • @EmeraldJournalClub
    @EmeraldJournalClub Před 3 lety +135

    This is a very interesting concept. I agree that is important to find meaning and value in your work but it's also important to have a genuine interest and passion for what you do. Often I find my clients feel unfulfilled in their careers because it's something that they weren't interested in, they followed this path as it was the next natural step in their career.
    Others have climbed the corporate ladder and love what they do because they find the work interesting and more importantly they love the company and the team they work with. There are a lot of factors at play when choosing a fulfilling career and sometimes it can involve a lot of trial and error to find what you really love.

    • @uRealReels
      @uRealReels Před rokem +1

      thank u. i tried booking a meeting with you from your web site, and the link crashed to a blank site. Can you please message me?

  • @wowsports8800
    @wowsports8800 Před rokem +3

    The fact that my interests from 5-10 years ago didn't change at all, I'm going to cry

  • @n.a7993
    @n.a7993 Před 7 lety +2253

    INCOMING: existential crisis!

    • @thelonedreamer9050
      @thelonedreamer9050 Před 7 lety +53

      IKR, everything I've been working towards is all begginning to feel meaningless.

    • @chewyvanillacloud
      @chewyvanillacloud Před 7 lety +61

      Nanna Andersen I feel the same , this year is my last year in uni and I have no idea what to do with my life, having no purpos makes me question so many things including why do I exist !!

    • @n.a7993
      @n.a7993 Před 7 lety +13

      I just visited the university I had been planning to go to and now im not sure if I actually want to go there! partially because of this video.. omg..

    • @KpopInYourArea95
      @KpopInYourArea95 Před 7 lety +13

      Me rn as I get closer to graduating from university next June. Don't know what to do since I decided to leave my original plan.

    • @Raphael-fi8hd
      @Raphael-fi8hd Před 7 lety +17

      Seek Jesus

  • @eggn00dle36
    @eggn00dle36 Před 6 lety +167

    He did a philosophical study on careers, he did partly pursue his passion

  • @varunkrishna5007
    @varunkrishna5007 Před 11 měsíci +6

    "Even if you match your passion with your work, and you're successful, you can still quite easily fail to have a fulfilling career". This is reality for me!

  • @kenyacwilson
    @kenyacwilson Před 3 lety +45

    "Do what is valuable" - this is a new perspective for me, and I so appreciate it.

  • @joeygoll6233
    @joeygoll6233 Před 7 lety +26

    he acts like everyone enjoys helping people and making the world a better place for humans

    • @codemiesterbeats
      @codemiesterbeats Před 7 lety +5

      "We drink and rob and rhyme and pillage" -The Beastie Boys Yea I mean everybody cant be in a position to actually help people. I mean somebody has to sweep the floor, fix the AC, design the cars. I mean an engineer's job is important but they dont exactly get the opportunity to help people in their work.

    • @ShaunTheCHB
      @ShaunTheCHB Před 7 lety +1

      The sad thing is, not everyone does enjoy helping people. That's something he forgot to realize. There are selfish people out there, he must not have encountered them yet, but he will.... He will be in for a shock when he does. "Some men want to watch the world burn".

  • @lepredator189
    @lepredator189 Před 7 lety +313

    Why the fuck is it always art, music, sports, hobbies? Why not math, medicine, science, accounting? Anyone know what I'm tryna say?

    • @dramawind
      @dramawind Před 7 lety +14

      Neeeeeeeerd!!

    • @deepthidayanand
      @deepthidayanand Před 7 lety +27

      no its because those fields are usually expected of people unlike the formers

    • @EmilioKolomenski
      @EmilioKolomenski Před 7 lety +15

      Maybe culture? Check out how much exposure each of those gets from mass media and the children oriented industries (toys, games, etc.) and tell me if it's unreasonable.

    • @sahasra5991
      @sahasra5991 Před 7 lety +1

      LePredator1 exactly!

    • @kamehameha5742
      @kamehameha5742 Před 7 lety +14

      LePredator1
      because art music and sports are generally perceived as more fun than math medicine science and stuff. I think you are trying to say that you're a NEEERRRDDD. lmao jk do wat ever the hell makes u happy peace out

  • @Danny-wj2pj
    @Danny-wj2pj Před 3 lety +2

    80,000 thanks for the speech! I am having a hard time searching for which career I would choose and which direction I would go... This helped me tremendously. Thank You 😍

  • @marryrosecericovelasco7582

    Earlier I'm thinking about this kind of career and thinking about what I've been exploring for, then I saw and watched this. Thank you. It's matched biblically. This, what has been my heart longing for.

  • @Sulerhy
    @Sulerhy Před 5 lety +16

    This video is just appropriate for someone who does not have any passion of their life. If you have a real passion, everything you try sometimes make burn out but you will never regret it. You have a passion, your heart always leads you to your life purpose

  • @labrujanat
    @labrujanat Před 6 lety +20

    As someone who doesn't really have a passion, and would just like to find a job I'm happy at, this was insightful.

  • @fathimakaleel494
    @fathimakaleel494 Před 3 lety +9

    Patience and Prayer...works every time.

  • @speculative
    @speculative Před rokem +1

    Giving people that you've never met career advice seems like one of the most difficult things to be successful at. I've consumed a lot of career advice over almost 3 decades now. This video provides some of the most useful general career advice I've seen.

  • @Bethycakesable
    @Bethycakesable Před 6 lety +278

    A deeply depressed young man is on the phone with his therapist. After working with the young man for months and seeing little improvement, the therapist is at a loss. He says to the young man, “look around you and think about one simple thing you could possibly do for another human being right now - I will hold, think about this and go do it. I will hang on the line however long it takes.” The young man thought about this and said, “well the old woman across the way has a lot of dead leaves and old flyers cluttering up her door step. She used to keep it tidy and with flowers. I could go over there and sweep up the leaves and dispose of the old flyers.” The therapist says, “good you go over there and do that, I will hold on the line.” After sweeping up the leaves and disposing of the old flyers, the young man returns to the phone. He admits to his therapist that he felt elevated for the first time in months by this simple exercise of giving.
    Doing what is valuable is subjective. If we can realize a value in what we are doing, almost anything can bring happiness and success. (True story, heard on the radio years ago.)

    • @EarthtonesCymbals
      @EarthtonesCymbals Před 6 lety +17

      When did they finally discover the old woman's body Beth?

    • @zdfvbadfbadb
      @zdfvbadfbadb Před 5 lety +17

      LOL. I thought the twist was that it was therapist who lived across the street and next she was going to talk him into mowing the lawn or repairing the shingles.

    • @omarh8731
      @omarh8731 Před 5 lety +1

      thank you for sharing this Beth!

    • @vishnuamritha
      @vishnuamritha Před 5 lety

      Well said .
      .. realising a value in whatt we are doing is the correct thing that everyone should give a hand

    • @PauloCesar-nk7jf
      @PauloCesar-nk7jf Před 4 lety +1

      "Doing what is valuable is subjective. If we can realize a value in what we are doing, almost anything can bring happiness and success"

  • @tylermcnally9931
    @tylermcnally9931 Před 8 lety +92

    It is definitely a combination of passion and value. You should pursue your passions, develop them into skills and then place yourself based on what society values and what your skills are. So you are, basically, still following your passion. The important caveat is that people are more fulfilled when the skills of their passion improve the lives of others. Value is a societal concept, so you won't produce value to everyone, but if you pick a large enough area of people who value a specific thing and provide that to them, you will be much more fulfilled in your endeavor.

    • @davidblairmusic
      @davidblairmusic Před 8 lety +2

      +Tyler McNally I think the key point of his speech was to ask the question - how to find a fulfilling career. His argument is to differentiate passion from interests. People confuse those two, as anything can be your passion if you feel fulfilled doing it, and interests change over your lifetime. Elon Musk is quoted as saying that you get paid proportionally to the size of problem you solve.

    • @coldspring22
      @coldspring22 Před 8 lety +1

      +David Blair No, in current capitalistic society, you don't get paid in proportion to what important problems you solve. Just look at investment bankers or high frequency trading extracting billions of dollars. What important problems did they solve to get rich? Yes Elon Musk learned how to make money from Stock Market. But what practical problems did Elon Musk solve? Tesla: Cheap ev with super light battery and long range? Nope, just another super expensive electric car with super heavy battery. So heavy it cannot be even jacked up by layman when tire gets punctured. Space-X: Space elevator or EM rail gun launcher for super cheap launches to orbit? Nope, just plain old chemical rocket with legs a la flash gorden. Elon musk wants to put a Million men on Mars? Where are the Space-X colonial ships departing for Mars? Elon Musk seem to be another Howard Hughes, a tycoon highly successful at becoming rich, but not really producing new breakthroughs for important issues facing the society. Well I take that back. If Elon Musk ever measures up to Howard Hughes, who was also incredibly brave, I would be shocked!

    • @BanglishBoy
      @BanglishBoy Před 8 lety +1

      +coldspring22 I'd say Paypal was a pretty practical problem solved by Musk.

    • @dreigningking
      @dreigningking Před 8 lety +7

      I think he's right in his highlight of value as the first thing one should find. Although, you're also right by saying ultimately "one is still following/pursuing passion".
      But he's point is, there are many people who have both passion and interest for something, yet they have not been able to create any value out of it. Such people often require someone else who sees value in what they're doing, to make it appealing to the eyes of others.
      On the other hand, when you identify value as the first thing, you're more likely to find an interest in one part or all of the parts of that thing, for which you can passionately pursue...

  • @cuekinaja
    @cuekinaja Před 3 lety +17

    Because I am a people pleaser and codependent who put others' needs above mine, I tried to be what's valuable according to people I respected and was close with at the time. So I studied to become an accountant because of someone's advice, changed my mind because I didn't like accounting, and I chose law as the next major, because lawyers help people, changed my mind again, and then I was told management and business are what count in the society, changed my mind again, and I chose international relationship as the last major and finally graduated university. But I hated dealing with people and politics so I didn't pursue career in that. But all this time my passion has always been learning Japanese language so to make money, I work as a translator. Other people told me it's just a hobby, no money in it. So they were wrong. In restrospect, I think I really should have followed my passion from the beginning, then I could always find ways to be useful and get paid for doing it.

  • @jackforester8456
    @jackforester8456 Před 3 lety +63

    Every job is valuable and can potentially help others, so I don't think "do what is valuable" is a good way of discriminating between a good and a bad career choice. Passions can help others, passions can give a meaning. The amount of people that have a love-hate relationship with their job and regret not following their passion is just too huge. I would say everyone should at least try

    • @bingbong2179
      @bingbong2179 Před 3 lety +2

      The idea was that you do a job that YOU think is valuable. Ofc you can just say "all jobs are valuable" but that's completely missing the point. Not to mention that he said you discover passion as a result of that. Not sure if you watched or understood anything from this video at all. All he's basically saying is that passion is a result of value but not all passions are valuable hence you want to start with the first and then go for the second

    • @jackforester8456
      @jackforester8456 Před 3 lety +11

      @@bingbong2179 I've watched the video a while ago and I thought his concepts were badly expressed. I have to recognize though that at least he doesn't explain things in that condescending tone of yours.

  • @callum7081
    @callum7081 Před 7 lety +70

    Doing what's valuable is the same as following your passion a lot of times.

  • @JOE324WILD
    @JOE324WILD Před 7 lety +151

    Ask yourself this:
    Did you ever in your youth ever think, "oh I want to pay bills, get a degree and a job?" No. Nobody ever dreamt of such thought.

    • @andrewhough8912
      @andrewhough8912 Před 7 lety +7

      Joseph Wild you do in your teens, it's important to know which path and studies you will take to attain a certain career

    • @JOE324WILD
      @JOE324WILD Před 7 lety +22

      We was never born to do such things society compels us to do.

    • @JOE324WILD
      @JOE324WILD Před 7 lety +17

      That's good to hear. If you enjoy working, that's all that matters. What I mean is, most people in today's society do things because they have to do, just because of one thing: money.

    • @inHell-rb
      @inHell-rb Před 7 lety +4

      Yap, and we wonder why we get more and more psychological issues.
      I'm feeling that You are on the right way. Seeing things clearly.
      As long as we search for external solutions, we wont be able to end this search.
      The advise he gave is meant for a specific meta/dimension (=western society); its like solving all political issues with only one political concept(/direction).
      Life is complex and multifaceted. Try to focus on more then one thing. It's always good to split up needs and manage them wisely.
      For example: If you got many friends you can manage your needs fairly so that your expectations matches what that person could offer. - But no... these day we are lazy and we want all now.

    • @GustavoRivasMendez
      @GustavoRivasMendez Před 7 lety +2

      Money organizes society, and makes it work together. Thanks to working together we were able to create civilization, advance science, improve life, and create new innovative art. No one is forcing you to do anything. You are perfectly free to go live isolated in the forest where no one will ask you to work and produce value. You'll probably die if you don't work the land to produce some food though. Or hunt animals or something.

  • @gabriellechaves7712
    @gabriellechaves7712 Před 3 lety +1

    One of the best TEDx Talks.
    It really makes a lot of sense for a person who has a great passion for what makes it easy to end up in exhaustion. I confess that I never thought from that perspective. Thank you!

  • @Mysticvibes_universe
    @Mysticvibes_universe Před 3 lety +1

    That's a wonderful talk by this young but very wise lad. This world needs to follow what he said. I agree with him totally! Kudos!

  • @kirkbokiluis1985
    @kirkbokiluis1985 Před 4 lety +84

    Sorry, it was when I finally turned to my passion, music, is when I became myself and as the saying goes, the rewards came in many forms....most of all, I l realize how lucky and blessed my life has been.

  • @ninabeach1
    @ninabeach1 Před 7 lety +191

    sleeping seems the only thing i love doing, im thinking to launch a career around that, mattress/pillow tester for start, anyone hiring?x

    • @aminesami1936
      @aminesami1936 Před 6 lety +15

      ninabeach1 vibration pillows to replace alarms 😍

    • @alexs555
      @alexs555 Před 6 lety +6

      ninabeach1 you could have a mattress review site! Share your experiences, help others make good buying choices. Needless to say, there's money in it too!

    • @EdriczZ_
      @EdriczZ_ Před 6 lety

      vibration pillows already exist for people with bad hearing, it should definitely become available for people with normal hearing as well though

    • @sablelion
      @sablelion Před 6 lety +1

      this market is already packed

    • @mjsousa9762
      @mjsousa9762 Před 6 lety +1

      Ask NASA - they do studies/tests that require people to lie in bed for days/weeks on end.

  • @norikoyama672
    @norikoyama672 Před 3 lety

    People often told me to do anything I like. I have been looking for what I like. However, that didn’t bring me any money. I became a teacher and saved many students who had a difficulty to answer questions. I was happy as if I could contribute the society here.
    Now, I have started looking for what I like again, but I am no longer deceived by what others told me. I will do something valuable to this world!
    Thank you!

  • @amyyy0790
    @amyyy0790 Před 10 měsíci +14

    My takeaways:
    - don't choose a career based on your interests, your interests can change any time
    - do something valuable for other people
    - don't just sit and think, go out there and actually start doing

  • @eliciagarcia3601
    @eliciagarcia3601 Před 4 lety +75

    This made me cry because I’m in my early twenties and had extreme stress over trying to figure out what to do with my life and then I wound up starting a charity that gets homeless kids off the street and ended up taking my career in that direction. I was feeling anxious wondering if maybe I made the wrong choice cause I’m not sure what I’m suppose to do and maybe I should do something “cool” that’s related to a passion I have. I was doing weird strange things like comparing myself to celebrities with grandiose highly romantic lives and feeling like a failure in comparison. Just a lot of confusion. I’m glad I randomly came across this video. Having an altruistic career is good and their is no career you’re “suppose” to have nor does your career define you as a person. It’s how you make a living and contribute. Trying to figure out career is a lot of anxiety in the early twenties!! It’s like “I dunno 🤷🏼‍♀️. Well what’s the point of life? Why am I on this planet? What am I suppose to do? I dunno.”

    • @the_donsavio
      @the_donsavio Před 3 lety +1

      Hope you find peace.

    • @kasuntharanga7376
      @kasuntharanga7376 Před 2 lety

      Read books on Buddhism

    • @nancywhite3501
      @nancywhite3501 Před 2 lety +4

      The point of life is much deeper than career. I have had several careers. I have searched and studied many topics to determine my ultimate career. Some people have a sense of calling to a career. Some people have a sense of destiny. Some people, like myself, just have a slow-burning motivation to seek understanding. In short, I seek perspective. If I could live my life over, I would make different choices in education and career, but, I would still be seeking perspective. It is who I am. Elicia, don't be discouraged. We are all like great swimmers who can swim in any depth of water---we can be many things, we can have various careers, etc., we can deal with many challenges, but whatever we do (wherever we swim) we still are still driven by some inner essence that is our true self and.....we will do what is in us (in my case--seek wisdom and seek perspective) no matter where we are. My guess is that it is impossible for any of us to fail in life because the purpose of life is to experience challenges and to work through them. Even success and failure are irrelevant. We may or may not feel happy. We may or may not feel fulfilled, but all my thoughts and studies lead me to believe that we cannot fail. We are living in a fabulous time wherein many ideas are now available through the internet. I believe that we humans collectively and individually cannot fail, we can only grow...as a species and individually. How can there be failure when growth is the goal? We are all an individual point in an endless galaxy of universes. Every choice you make is right because you are multi-faceted. To put it is spiritual terms--we are all a drop of God and in God we live and move and have our being. Meanwhile, live your earthly life with wisdom, compassion, and peace. Whatever you do is just fine.

  • @Super-id7bq
    @Super-id7bq Před 7 lety +929

    This is all based on one fundamentally flawed assumption which is that a career has to be something you do for the rest of your life. I have have had a number of shitty jobs, but also 3 of what you might call careers. I follow my interests and I make the most of them until I find something that interests me more and I pivot towards that. I'm now in my 30's and I've had a successful career in music, then professional theatre and now film and if I find something else that interests me I'll likely start over again. You can have a job that benefits you more than others and still contribute to a better world, your sense of humanity and charity doesn't end when you turn off the lights and go home. Trust me, don't live your life like you get to do it again. You do it once and then it's over, no replays, no second attempts. Make the most of it.

    • @mostunique5941
      @mostunique5941 Před 6 lety +16

      Kraig I want to do sound engineering but I'm not sure. My dad is a boss of a big company and is more on the "study hard, get a good job" side but my mum just wants me to pass my subjects. I'm in Australia so the music industry isn't really a thing here. What age did you decide " I want to go into music"? I'm great with software and love learning how to use it. I also like making compositions but at my school we only have GarageBand and I already have better software then that, so school can't help me but then I'm bored because Ive already used the sounds on my software multiple times ( Ive tried to edit the sounds so they sound different but that only stays interesting for so long). My parents won't spend more money as the software cost quite a bit already which means at the moment I'm bored. I'm 15 so ill be waiting sooooo long to go to university and I seriously just can't wait that long. Its like knowing your good at something and you know you could be successful and good at your job but instead your stuck in a place that is trying to teach you Shakespeare.
      I'm looking for some guidance, I'm stuck.

    • @mostunique5941
      @mostunique5941 Před 6 lety +2

      Yea, a lot has changed over that 3 weeks, I hate to admit I'm struggling right now but I am. I'm trying to look after my friends ( one has autism and I have to keep a constant eye on him ). The others are alright but their "Experimenting". Hard to keep a bunch boys from fighting each other and try to keep them out of trouble. I don't have much me time. To get a job would just drain me completely, even odd jobs. I'm just trying to concentrate on my mental health and developing a good work ethic as I am now completing all the work my classes give me. I have touched a keyboard twice in the last 3 weeks. I've lost the passion for music in all honesty, although I still like to listen to music when doing assignments. Sorry for the rant but got nowhere else I can say this.

    • @mostunique5941
      @mostunique5941 Před 6 lety

      Aly Dreamer Thanks for the advice, my school holidays started a week ago and ive gotta say, I feel normal again. You kinda right, maybe I do put too much pressure on myself just for my friends. I mean ive always been like this with my friends and its usually helps them a ton. But I can only help them for so long. Maybe now ill just help my friends when their prepared to listen to my advice. Thanks👍

    • @MrsCluffRN
      @MrsCluffRN Před 6 lety +15

      As you grow older, your "career" can change many times. Especially as a woman I noticed I was able to work as a full time RN much more than when I was a young mom with 3 kids at home. And now, being a disabled grandmother, my "career" or life purpose has changed yet again.. Be open to change!

    • @thischarminglovehound2376
      @thischarminglovehound2376 Před 6 lety +2

      Well said!! I'm pushing thirty and want to go back to school to get an entirely different career.. You're so right when you say that you must only have one career for the rest of your life,

  • @jahnavi.youtube
    @jahnavi.youtube Před rokem +14

    I think we should do both focusing on our interests and finding out what's best for us
    There might be a chance that following our interests and passion might help others as well 💜

  • @ladybird491
    @ladybird491 Před 3 lety +2

    I am a writer, and a brilliant writer, especially in poetry. I never had a passion for poetry, I always just had absolutely love for it, and a hunger to know everything about it, and I wake up each day wanting to do it all day until I pass out. I write poetry to teach about life, and teach young writers how to use poetry to express how they feel deep down inside.

  • @hieninh6885
    @hieninh6885 Před 7 lety +357

    this video is partially helpful. I think there are basically two kinds of people: the ones who have a strong passion (i suppose these people are just the minority) and the ones who are between interests or not interested in a certain thing (unfortunately, from personal observation, most of us).
    With the first type, they should definitely follow their passion because it is probably the only way to bring about satisfaction and happiness. I have a friend, who is crazily passionate about maths. He said to me that all he wants to do in life is to resolve maths problems and discover something new in the field. he said that he would become a mathematician (although this job is not really well paid in my country) or he would regret forever. So, for these people, it seems to be redundant to give them advice on career choice. when u are really passionate abt sth, u know what to do. Like in The Voice, i see many people come on stage when they are seventy or older. When they were young, they have to do another job to make both ends meet, support the family and so on. but their passion as a child tells them to do so. Otherwise, they will always wonder what would it be if they did sth different.
    With the second type, the ones without a specific interest, this video may be helpful. If u dont love something so much, let's explore neglected issues and do sth meaningful. I read in "what I wish I knew when I was twenty" by Tina Seelig that you should make meaning rather than make money. maybe during doing something meaningful u will finally encounter ur dream. or at least this way keeps you from being out of jobs lol :)
    Anyway, I think he made a compelling presentation and his idea is thought provoking. Above all, career choice is a personal option. it is the best if u can make decision yourself, using your own brain and heart. in case u can't, refering to the advice in this video may help! thanks

    • @luqcrusher
      @luqcrusher Před 7 lety +2

      Hiền Đinh Well thought out response. Kudos!

    • @keilanhamilton7514
      @keilanhamilton7514 Před 6 lety +8

      I definitely agree with your view. Certain people are really passionate about their work. Such passion does end up leading to tremendous success.
      I believe that there are also a lot of people that aren't sure what their true passions are.
      The word passion seems to be applied to lightly by the speaker. A passion I's when you have A burning desire to accomplish something.
      I would love to see more of how the statistical data defined passion as a word.
      A passion isn't just a interest as the speaker is mentioning. A passion I's apart of who you are.
      Nice reply and amazing Ted Talk to reflect upon.

    • @laylarami7387
      @laylarami7387 Před 6 lety +2

      Hiền Đinh what about the people alike me, the ones who are beyond passionate and have multiple dreams,the ones which change their mind constantly jet every decision is still fully and exclusively driven by passion.
      That's me, were I refuse to listen to people at school when they tell me that I need a back up plan,or that's aiming to high or simply not believing in me.
      Also have the burden of not being academically smart at high school or secondary school level therefore I have nothing to back me up.
      I fully know that what ever field I choose to go in, academic or not it el will be million times different that we're I am today.
      And although I am determined, the words and disbelief still has an effect and grows on me slowly but surely, and I have too keep reminding myself that I am inteligente and have in me to be successful x

    • @Jbat1014
      @Jbat1014 Před 6 lety

      Preach

    • @evevl9891
      @evevl9891 Před 6 lety +2

      Hiền Đinh
      Oh your English Shooked me out. Your name tell me that you are Vietnamese ? Right ?

  • @Nicken0o0
    @Nicken0o0 Před 7 lety +42

    I cried when i saw the title. My passion is art. My work? I don't have work. So I'm lost, actually.

    • @Nicken0o0
      @Nicken0o0 Před 7 lety +12

      ***** that was what I'm tryinf to do right now. But unfortunately I don't have a family that support me. Wish me luck, anyway. :D

    • @cheyennezarate9154
      @cheyennezarate9154 Před 7 lety +2

      You can find a career that is linked to art within digital media, or you can do work in other fields that is valuable to many people/gives you financial stability and simply have more time to create your art just because you want to. We always make things so black and white, ie. I love art, therefore I must be an artist. No, I love drawing too, but I am aware that at this point in time, I can make more of a difference learning social media marketing and spreading that knowledge to others to help them find financial freedom. With this freedom, they can use their time for altruism, and of course just a little bit of selfish time to do what they love as well.

    • @attoooh
      @attoooh Před 7 lety +5

      Nicken0o0 you can fix old artworks... and be payed well and still work with art. art is not just creating... ppl keeps forgetting it. there's no new art without the study of the older one.

    • @SylviaEvilKitty
      @SylviaEvilKitty Před 7 lety +2

      Nicken0o0 Good luck, stranger! ^^)/

    • @newtonia-uo4889
      @newtonia-uo4889 Před 6 lety +3

      Nicken0o0 nc, get a good job and persue art on the side.

  • @danielsalazar8919
    @danielsalazar8919 Před 2 lety

    The point of this video it's not about what career you should choose but rather what do you think you can do to make a better world. I found it really helpfull cause I'm always thinking what can I do to make money and never actually think how the things I'm good at can be used for others and actually get value. So for me I'm good with languages and I used to draw a lot when I was a kid and now I'm studying Audiovisual communication. I think both skills can be applied cause I can design and create subtitles for projects with my english knowledge, but still there's many thinks I can build up from this video, thank you so much!

  • @joanmae6373
    @joanmae6373 Před 2 lety

    i adnired this guy he speaks very clear,not eating his words....love from the Philippines

  • @haileywarner5109
    @haileywarner5109 Před 4 lety +10

    This was beautiful. I’m a highschool senior who has been in a personal crisis for the past year about selecting a major/career. I think studying English and Education is really what matters to me and how I’ll contribute. Thank you!!

  • @NeburWolf
    @NeburWolf Před 7 lety +266

    Is it just me, or did he fail to understand the diffefence between passion and interest? I have interest in many things, but passion for very few. Maybe the difficult part is finding your passion amongst your interests.

    • @youllsee5244
      @youllsee5244 Před 7 lety +18

      I would say that a passion is a strong interest (an interest with a stronger emotional component). Just because you are even more emotionally attached to one thing than to another, doesn´t mean that it will make you happier to follow the former. One important part of this talk was to point out that passion/interest follows you whenever you devote your time to something that is truly valuable in your eyes (rather: were your chances of being most valuable are the highest). If you just follow an already existing passion/interest of yours, then you might end up realizing later that what you are the doing is not valuable at all (because you failed to achieve sth in this field or because you realize that this field is not valuable at all even if you achieve sth) and once that happens, your interest/passion diappears. Think of where your current interest/passions come from. You developed them in a time when you thought that this is sth valuable (being a Rockstar because you saw the girls on tv; working for an ngo because you saw how they distributed food in country xy...). But this judgement might have been false. So now, this talk encourages us to think again, taking into consideration more factors, in what field we could truly be valuable to society.

    • @Eveross0
      @Eveross0 Před 7 lety +4

      @youllsee Very well written :) I'm struggling finding the right path for me right now, it's tough~

    • @patycastro3612
      @patycastro3612 Před 6 lety +11

      Nebur Wolf. Passion is not inborn, passion is developed by getting good at what you do. The problem is that nowadays a lot of people believe that their passion, vocation or calling is something pre-existing which they have to find by introspection, which is totally false.
      Just put it this way: you're 15 and you listen and read everywhere that to be successful you have to figure out what your passion is. You want to live a meaningful life, so you try to answer the typical questions (what am I good at?, What kind of job would I do even if I wouldn't get paid, how does my perfect day looks like? And so), but then you realize that you can't answer those questions the way you'd like, and you don't know why. So you get anxious, and you try to figure out what your passion is even more compulsively.
      The thing is that you assume that a passion, calling or vocation is something you have to discover. And you feel anxious because you can't discover it in spite of all your efforts.
      However, that anxiety will disappear once you realize that passion is something you develop overtime by getting good at what you do. not something you discover by watching videos on CZcams or by answering self-help queations.
      I really encourage you to read "so good they can't ignore you". That book gave me many answers. And if you don't want to read the book you can find a lot of reviews about it on CZcams, so that you can realize that what I recommend you is worth reading it.

    • @KALITAME
      @KALITAME Před 4 lety

      @@Eveross0 Same here, because I don't feel yet like I have a passion I can make a living from. And in what I do now it has interest and it's meaningfull, working in environment, but there is big lack of jobs where I live... But what about you, did u find your path ?

  • @VincentTseng
    @VincentTseng Před 7 měsíci

    Thx for reminding myself that my career is valuable. I’ve been struggling to enjoy my career like I used to. Now I am calmer about my choices

  • @Evayoubinchung
    @Evayoubinchung Před 2 lety +2

    Every single word is so amazing! Do what's valuable and do what you can make the world better... Such an amazing advice! 💕

  • @greggeverman5578
    @greggeverman5578 Před 4 lety +384

    Well, the comment section sure shows that he rattled a lot of cages!
    Not saying I agree with 100% of his points, but people need to hear this without shutting their minds in the first 1 minute of the vid.
    C’mon... We watch Ted talks to better ourselves, right? He’s giving out a lot of good pointers.

    • @nguyenvansang6922
      @nguyenvansang6922 Před 4 lety +4

      nice

    • @greggeverman5578
      @greggeverman5578 Před 4 lety +2

      @@nguyenvansang6922 Thank you very kindly.

    • @asthapahwa7001
      @asthapahwa7001 Před 3 lety +16

      Exactlyy and he was right about the fact that our passions change.

    • @blackharmonics4518
      @blackharmonics4518 Před 3 lety +15

      @@asthapahwa7001 Plus he pointed out, that passion can come from unexpected things. Like finding passion in a job you never expected to do before. And it's not like he said, that you should never at any cost follow your passion. For many people, this advice still work, because they see a certain value in it. Value can also mean to follow your passion. Very philosophical TED talk.

  • @tealrose3248
    @tealrose3248 Před 3 lety +147

    My theory is: think about what you would do with your time if you didn't have to think about how to pay your bills. Then think about how to get the world to pay you enough money to cover your bills while doing that.
    If you can't do that, your next best is to find something you don't mind doing for a living, that pays enough money that you don't have to put in a depressing number of hours getting your bills paid so you still have time to do what you want.

    • @LancelotGraal
      @LancelotGraal Před 3 lety +20

      Now that's good advice :)
      That's the path I followed. If I didn't have bills to pay, I'd just read and read and learn and learn about loads of stuff. And then, I'd go talk to people about it, mainly kids, cause I like kids. So the answer was quite easy, actually. I'm training to be a teacher. I'll have to always keep reading new stuff and keep my knowledge up to date, mainly on what's the best way to motivate kids, how to avoid conflicts, how to make sure I'm actually teaching what I expect them to succeed at.

    • @zeb9826
      @zeb9826 Před 3 lety +4

      @@LancelotGraal well that's something I've been thinking about lately, thanks for giving more thought food. Do you have enough free time as a teacher to pursue your other hobbys or is it like a student, having "homework" after work ?

    • @micutzul135s4
      @micutzul135s4 Před 2 lety +2

      This is the comment i m looking for :D

    • @yasminflower5140
      @yasminflower5140 Před rokem

      If i don't have to think about bills, i will probably stay at the beach all day , making tea and coffee ......can the world pay me to do it please?🥺

    • @pandax5359
      @pandax5359 Před rokem +2

      @@yasminflower5140 Get some plastic surgery and be an influencer

  • @mysterical-
    @mysterical- Před 3 lety +2

    This basically relates to finding your Ikigai! I recommend everybody figure their career choices based around this diagram! It really helps!

  • @catluver13
    @catluver13 Před 2 lety +2

    I watched this video almost 5 years ago as a sophomore in high school thought about it a lot but somewhere along the line I forgot about it and chose my passion and got absolutely burned out and soon switched my major. Still confused as to who I’m supposed to be but rewatching this video I feel like I’m on the correct path