Like myself, today's twenty-somethings
were raised to find our dreams and follow them. But it's a different world. And
as the jobless
generation grows up, we realize the grand betrayal of the false idols of
passion. This philosophy no longer works for us, or at most, feels incomplete.
So what do we do? I propose a different frame of reference: Forget about
finding your passion. Instead, focus on finding big problems.
Putting problems at the centre of our
decision-making changes everything. It's not about the self any more. It's
about what you can do and how you can be a valuable contributor. People working
on the biggest problems are compensated in the biggest ways. I don't mean this
in a strict financial sense, but in a deeply human sense. For one, it shifts
your attention from you to others and the wider world. You stop dwelling. You
become less self-absorbed. Ironically, we become happier if we worry
less about what makes us happy.
Extract of article from Oliver Segovia,
Harvard Business Review
http://blogs.hbr.org/cs/2012/01/to_find_happiness_forget_about.html