Mission Passion
Following Your Dreams Is a Terrible Advice
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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Anshuman Sharma
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
This book is my attempt to say what nobody mentioned. This book is for everyone who was told to follow their dreams and woke up wondering what went wrong. This book is your second chance.
Your heart is a fine organ. It keeps you alive. But it is not a career counselor.
I am not against passion. I am not against dreams. I am not writing this book to drain the color from your ambitions or convince you that work should be a gray, joyless march toward retirement.
I wrote this book because I watched too many talented, intelligent people wreck their careers following advice that sounded wise and turned out to be hollow. These are not tragic people. They are smart people who received bad advice and mistook it for wisdom.
The advice came from everywhere. Books. Podcasts. Social media. Well-meaning relatives. The message was consistent, ‘Find what you love, and the rest will follow. The money will come. The meaning will come. The satisfaction will come. Just find the thing.’
What nobody mentioned was that "the thing" is not something most people have at eighteen, or twenty-five, or even thirty-five. What nobody mentioned was that passion, for most people, is not a discovery but a construction, something built over years of investment, not found in a flash of insight. What nobody mentioned was that the labor market does not care about your passion. It cares about your skills.
What this book is not. It is not a career planning workbook. It will not ask you to fill out self-assessment matrices or create five-year plans. Those tools have their place, but this is not that book. This is a book about ideas, specifically, the idea that the dominant model of career satisfaction is fundamentally broken, and the idea that a better model exists.