the most important thing i learned from....decades....in school is the following:
if
you're going to go to school with the purpose of doing something
competitive with it (be that in employment or in academia), you have no
option but to pick something you love to do. things may have been
different in the past when the field was narrower, but nowadays living
in north america means you're competing against two thirds of the planet
for just about anything, and if you're not loving it then somebody else
is going to mop the floor with you.
you might have a
greater pure aptitude in the topic and in general. you might have higher
test scores. you might be a harder worker, even. yet, if you're doing
it for labour then the blunt reality is that you have no chance against
the thousands of other people that do it for *fun*.
it's
actually sort of an anarchist's ideal: the only kind of vocation any of
us have any real chance in any more is what we'd love to be doing,
anyways. the problem is that so few of us were raised with that mindset.
we were told to do something we don't love because it is marketable
(only to be outcompeted by somebody that loves it), or even to do
something we loathe because it's profitable (only to run into the same
problem). while that's happening, we're wasting developing skills doing
things we enjoy, and getting behind those that figured this out.
if
there are changes to immigration, or drastic improvements in living
standard elsewhere, maybe it will once again make sense to tell your
young, operatic nephew they'd be better off as a dentist. but, as it is,
there's no deficit of kids that knew they wanted to be dentists when
they were three years old and have spent their whole lives preparing,
and the reality is that your nephew doesn't stand a fucking chance
against them - he's really better off exploring his vocal chords.
i think that's a mass shift in social mindset that we need to have.