And most of all, don't play it safe. Resist the seductions of the
cowardly values our society has come to prize so highly: comfort,
convenience, security, predictability, control. These, too, are nets.
Above all, resist the fear of failure. Yes, you will make mistakes. But
they will be your mistakes, not someone else's. And you will survive
them, and you will know yourself better for having made them, and you
will be a fuller and a stronger person.
It means not just going with the flow. It means not just "getting into"
whatever school or program comes next. It means figuring out what you
want for yourself, not what your parents want, or your peers want, or
your school wants, or your society wants. Originating your own values.
Thinking your way toward your own definition of success. Not simply
accepting the life that you've been handed. Not simply accepting the
choices you've been handed. When you walk into Starbucks, you're offered
a choice among a latte and a macchiato and an espresso and a few other
things, but you can also make another choice. You can turn around and
walk out. When you walk into college, you are offered a choice among law
and medicine and investment banking and consulting and a few other
things, but again, you can also do something else, something that no one
has thought of before.
But either way, either because you went with the flow or because you set
your course very early, you wake up one day, maybe 20 years later, and
you wonder what happened: how you got there, what it all means. Not what
it means in the "big picture," whatever that is, but what it means to
you. Why you're doing it, what it's all for. It sounds like a cliché,
this "waking up one day," but it's called having a midlife crisis, and
it happens to people all the time.
http://chronicle.com/article/What-Are-You-Going-to-Do-With/124651/
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment