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Wherever we are in our lives, we may not know what exactly we want to do or what weâre good at. However, we all have things weâre interested in. But what should you do if they donât seem âmeaningfulâ enough to be a career? Letâs take a passion for photographing birds. Well, if itâs interesting for us, following that curiosity could spur us towards mastery and send us in useful directions â like new connections, a book project or a campaign to preserve local wetlands.
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Some may question this advice of optimizing for interesting, that itâs a pipe dream or something only the wealthy can do. Thatâs fair enough â in the short term. But the whole premise of playing the long game is weâre not victims of circumstance. Our current reality isnât our fixed, eternal reality.
But what if youâve been working heads down for so long that youâre not even sure what you find interesting anymore? Or youâre stuck or bored in your professional life, or feel confused, or just arenât sure where to start?
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Often, the truest test of whatâs interesting to you is to look at how youâre spending time right now.
For instance, if you canât get enough of podcasts and are always recommending new ones to others, maybe you could raise your hand and offer to launch one for your company or seek a job working for a firm that produces them.
Or if your Instagram feed is littered with close-ups of food, you might be a good candidate to become a food writer, start a catering company or head up branding for a food company.
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Itâs valuable to notice what is holding your attention â but donât rush to make a fascination your new mission until youâve tested it out. Find ways to learn more, such as setting up interviews with people who work in the field, reading books about it or asking a friend if you can shadow him at work for a day. By seeing if your curiosity sustains itself over time, you can weed out fleeting interests.
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âIâm an artist,â Sarah Feingold told Dorie Clark, âand I went to law school because I wanted to help artists like myself.â
But it didnât turn out that way. She got a job at a small law firm in upstate New York. She drafted motions, drew up contracts, and so on. Even though she was learning a lot, she didnât feel satisfied.
What did bring her joy was making jewelry on the side, which she started selling on a then-new website called Etsy. Looking at the site, she had a revelation: âEtsy didnât have an in-house attorney, and my goal to help artists could come true if I worked for them.â
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When youâre unsure of where your interests lie, go back to your first principles.
One day, Etsy announced new policies. Sarah had questions and some legal insights. Since the company was still small, she got the CEO, Rob Kalin, on the phone. They had a short chat, and then Sarah decided to press her luck.
She booked a plane ticket to NYC to pitch him for a job, but Kalin said he was busy. She persisted, and eventually he agreed to fit her in. When they met, he ended up hiring her on the spot.
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âAt the time, people thought what I did was ridiculous,â recalls Sarah, who went on to work at Etsy for over nine years. Why give up a steady job? But safety and security werenât what brought her to law; sheâd studied it to help other artists. Thatâs what was interesting to her, and she was willing to fight for it.
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Too often, in our lives, we tend to look at where we are right now and say, âWhere can I go from here?â But thatâs asking the wrong question.
If you start with your present situation, youâre limiting yourself out of the gate to what seems attainable.
ï»żThere are a million reasons not to try something new. But playing the long game means ââacknowledging we arenât already experts at everything, and that itâs OK to sometimes look foolish in service of becoming the person we want to be.
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When we make the choice to optimize for interesting, weâre investing in our future selves. We donât know where it will lead, and thatâs the whole point.
Playing the long game means preparing ourselves for an uncertain future, where, because of the effort weâve invested over time, weâre ready to take full advantage of the opportunities life presents.
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If we want to play the long game, one of the first things we must do is identify [our most important] goals so weâre able to make the adjustments needed in our lives to move towards achieving them.
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Your work is going to fill a large part of your life, and the only way to be truly satisfied is to do what you believe is great work. And the only way to do great work is to love what you do. If you havenât found it yet, keep looking. Donât settle. As with all matters of the heart, youâll know when you find it.
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IDEAS CURATED BY
CURATOR'S NOTE
What should we do if weâre still figuring out what feels meaningful to us or if weâre drawn to many different things? âOptimize for interestingâ, says Dorie Clark, in her new book âThe Long Game: How to Be a Long-Term Thinker in a Short-Term Worldâ.
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