Better Living Through Thinking |
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Graham: How to Do What You LoveThu, 09 Mar 2006Excerpt from a recent Paul Graham essay: <http://www.paulgraham.com/love.html> Prestige is especially dangerous to the ambitious. If you want to
make ambitious people waste their time on errands, the way to do it
is to bait the hook with prestige. That's the recipe for getting
people to give talks, write forewords, serve on committees, be
department heads, and so on. It might be a good rule simply to avoid
any prestigious task. If it didn't suck, they wouldn't have had to
make it prestigious.
Also, regarding doing what you love in your spare time (i.e., day job vs what-you-love): The two-job route is less common than the organic route, because it
requires a deliberate choice. It's also more dangerous. Life tends
to get more expensive as you get older, so it's easy to get sucked
into working longer than you expected at the money job. Worse still,
anything you work on changes you. If you work too long on tedious
stuff, it will rot your brain. And the best paying jobs are most
dangerous, because they require your full attention.
Regarding deciding on your job too soon: When you're young, you're given the impression that you'll get
enough information to make each choice before you need to make
it. But this is certainly not so with work. When you're deciding
what to do, you have to operate on ridiculously incomplete
information. Even in college you get little idea what various types
of work are like. At best you may have a couple internships, but not
all jobs offer internships, and those that do don't teach you much
more about the work than being a batboy teaches you about playing
baseball.
Regarding choosing a high-paying job with hopes of changing later once you have enough money: Most people would say, I'd take that problem. Give me a million
dollars and I'll figure out what to do. But it's harder than it
looks. Constraints give your life shape. Remove them and most people
have no idea what to do: look at what happens to those who win
lotteries or inherit money. Much as everyone thinks they want
financial security, the happiest people are not those who have it,
but those who like what they do. So a plan that promises freedom at
the expense of knowing what to do with it may not be as good as it
seems.
Regarding working on what you like: What you should not do, I think, is worry about the opinion of
anyone beyond your friends. You shouldn't worry about
prestige. Prestige is the opinion of the rest of the world. When you
can ask the opinions of people whose judgement you respect, what
does it add to consider the opinions of people you don't even know?
This is easy advice to give. It's hard to follow, especially when you're young. [5] Prestige is like a powerful magnet that warps even your beliefs about what you enjoy. It causes you to work not on what you like, but what you'd like to like. and note #5: Donald Hall said young would-be poets were mistaken to be so
obsessed with being published. But you can imagine what it would do
for a 24 year old to get a poem published in The New Yorker. Now to
people he meets at parties he's a real poet. Actually he's no better
or worse than he was before, but to a clueless audience like that,
the approval of an official authority makes all the difference. So
it's a harder problem than Hall realizes. The reason the young care
so much about prestige is that the people they want to impress are
not very discerning.
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Mon Feb 6 23:53:18 MST 2012 |