Thursday, August 20, 2020
What Is Your Mission
What Is Your Mission You were not meant to do any one thing for the rest of your life. Yet this idea of birthright passion is promulgated throughout our society, throughout the Internet in particular, as if each person has a preordained vocation he or she must pursueâ"as if evolution, natural selection, or whateverâ"has spent thousands of years plotting and transmogrifying so you can be a writer, a yoga teacher, or an astronaut. Life doesnât contain these absolutes. No one has a predetermined destiny; no one has a singular preexisting passion waiting to be uncovered. There are dozens, even hundreds, of things you can do with your lifeâ"work you can be happy and passionate about. Hence, âfollow your passionâ is crappy advice. Whatâs important to consider, then, is this question: What is my mission? Many of us go through life working a job or, worse, a career. We become accustomed to a particular lifestyle, a lifestyle that involves too much spending, personal debt, and consumer purchasesâ"our own personalized version of the American Dream. Then we get stuck on the corporate ladder, and before we know it weâre too high up to climb back down, so high up even looking down is a terrifying proposition. So we keep soldiering forward, onward and upward, without ever asking the important questions. Thereâs nothing inherently wrong with working a job: we all have to keep the lights on. However, when we travel too far from living a deliberate lifeâ"when we stop asking difficult questionsâ"we stop feeling fulfilled. Like your passion, your mission is not preexisting, and itâs not always easy to find or pursue. When you find somethingâ"anythingâ"youâre passionate about and you make it your lifeâs mission, you will find great joy and rewards in the work you do. Otherwise youâre just earning a paycheck. Read this essay and 150 others in our new book, Essential.
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