Passion, Solved: Is It Really Worth Pursuing?
Nearly 60% of American workers are checked out at their jobs. Meanwhile, every graduation speech in history tells you to follow your passion and you’ll never work a day in your life. So which is it?
In this episode, Drew and I debate both sides. I argue for passion. He argues for practicality. And what we discover along the way is that the whole question is kind of a false dichotomy. We get into the psychology of harmonious vs. obsessive passion (and why one leads to fulfillment while the other led Kurt Cobain to write “I don’t have the passion anymore” in his suicide note). We talk survivorship bias, Maslow’s hierarchy, and why financial stress literally impairs your ability to think creatively. I share the story of quitting my investment bank job at 24, living on a friend’s futon, and knowing within a month that I was never going back. We look at how Jane Goodall took a secretarial job and stumbled into becoming the world’s preeminent primatologist. And we land on a phrase I think is way more useful than “follow your passion”: develop your passion… because passion isn’t something you find, it’s something you grow.
Episode Notes
Referenced in This Episode
- J.K. Rowling
- Kurt Cobain, Nirvana frontman
- Harmonious vs. Obsessive Passion
- Gallup State of the Global Workplace Report
- Tim Ferriss, The 4-Hour Workweek
- Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs
- Self-Determination Theory
- Cal Newport, So Good They Can't Ignore You
- Jane Goodall
- Trent Reznor
- Steven Pressfield, Turning Pro
- Carol Dweck
- Angela Duckworth
- Dave Grohl
