You always read about people who've taken a creative, bold, and usually seemingly silly approach to getting hired and ultimately reaching their goals, and you think, Well, sure, it worked for this guy/gal, but that's the exception. I don't really feel like an exception. (Maybe you don't think exactly that because you don't use the word "gal," but you get the idea.)
But these days, these acts of "nonconformity," if you want to call them that, are actually so abundant that they've almost become the norm. So why haven't I done something like it yet? Why haven't I written a letter like this one (that, in 1934, probably was a little more unique)?
I guess it's because I feel like these ploys are gimmicky, and I shouldn't have to stoop so low as to stand out based on my tactic. I should be successful based purely on my talent.
Of course, there's the argument that people who come up with these tactics are obviously creative and talented. And then also the one about who cares how you were discovered, because in the end the important thing is that you were.
Both very good arguments.
Showing posts with label love. Show all posts
Showing posts with label love. Show all posts
Friday, March 16, 2012
Thursday, October 6, 2011
Last Words
Steve Jobs' 2005 commencement address at Stanford has been passed around all day today as if it contained his last dying words, and rightly so. It's compelling stuff. The quote that almost had me in tears at my desk was:
I hate my MacBook with a passion and wish it would finish literally falling apart so I could get rid of it. But Jobs knew what he was talking about in that speech, I think. And I think it's time I start learning to speak the language.
I have looked in the mirror every morning and asked myself: "If today were the last day of my life, would I want to do what I am about to do today?" And whenever the answer has been "No" for too many days in a row, I know I need to change something.My emotional fragility aside, it's an easy concept to read or hear and respond to with, "Yeah! I'm going to do that! I'm going to quit my job if it's not making me happy and devote myself to what I love! Immediately!" But Jobs might as well have said, "あなたが好きであることをしてください" (which is allegedly "do what you love" in Japanese...but don't go getting it tattooed onto yourself or anything, because it could actually mean, "do me in the lovely bathroom"). To me, that speech was in a foreign language. For those of us who have been raised in a "do what you have to do" world, the entire concept of doing what you love simply because you love it is extremely difficult to comprehend. It doesn't even seem like a real option, let alone something an actual human being could do without detrimental consequences. That's how little it registers with my life experience up until this point.
I hate my MacBook with a passion and wish it would finish literally falling apart so I could get rid of it. But Jobs knew what he was talking about in that speech, I think. And I think it's time I start learning to speak the language.
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