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Why you will fail to have a great career

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    I want to discuss with you this afternoon
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    why you're going to fail to have a great career. (Laughter)
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    I'm an economist. I do dismal.
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    End of the day, it's ready for dismal remarks.
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    I only want to talk to those of you who want a great career.
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    I know some of you have already decided
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    you want a good career.
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    You're going to fail, too — (Laughter) —
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    because — Goodness, you're all cheery about failing. (Laughter)
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    Canadian group, undoubtedly. (Laughter)
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    Those trying to have good careers are going to fail,
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    because, really, good jobs are now disappearing.
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    There are great jobs and great careers,
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    and then there are the high-workload, high-stress,
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    bloodsucking, soul-destroying kinds of jobs,
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    and practically nothing in between.
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    So the people looking for good jobs are going to fail.
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    I'm going to talk about those looking for great jobs, great
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    careers, and why you're going to, why you're going to fail.
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    First reason is that no matter how many times people tell you,
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    "If you want a great career, you have to pursue your passion,
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    you have to pursue your dreams, you have to pursue,
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    the greatest fascination in your life,"
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    you hear it again and again and then you decide
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    not to do it. It doesn't matter how many times you download
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    Steven J.'s Stanford commencement address,
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    you still look at it and decide not to do it.
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    I'm not quite sure why you decide not to do it.
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    You're too lazy to do it. It's too hard.
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    You're afraid if you look for your passion and don't find it,
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    you'll feel like you're an idiot, so then you make excuses
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    about why you're not going to look for your passion.
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    And they are excuses, ladies and gentlemen.
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    We're going to go through a whole long list, your creativity,
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    and thinking of excuses not to do what you really
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    need to do if you want to have a great career.
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    So, for example, one of your great excuses is,
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    "Well, great careers are really and truly, for most people,
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    just a matter of luck, so I'm going to stand around,
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    I'm going to try to be lucky, and if I'm lucky,
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    I'll have a great career. If not, I'll have a good career."
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    But a good career is an impossibility, so that's not going to work.
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    Then, your other excuse is, "Yes, there are special people
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    who pursue their passions, but they are geniuses.
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    They are Steven J. I'm not a genius.
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    When I was five, I thought I was a genius,
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    but my professors have beaten that idea
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    out of my head long since." (Laughter) Mm?
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    "And now I know I am completely competent."
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    Now, you see, if this was 1950,
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    being completely competent,
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    that would have given you a great career.
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    But guess what? This is almost 2012, and saying
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    to the world, "I am totally, completely competent,"
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    is damning yourself with the faintest of praise.
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    And then, of course, another excuse:
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    "Well, I would do this, I would do this, but, but,
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    well, after all, I'm not weird.
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    Everybody knows that people who pursue their passions
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    are somewhat obsessive. A little strange? Mm? Mm? Okay?
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    You know, a fine line between madness and genius.
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    I'm not weird. I've read Steven J.'s biography.
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    Oh my goodness. I am not that person. I am nice.
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    I am normal. I'm a nice, normal person,
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    and nice, normal people
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    don't have passion.
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    Ah. But I still want a great career.
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    I'm not prepared to pursue my passion, so I know
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    what I'm going to do, because I have, I have a solution,
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    I have a strategy.
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    It's the one Mommy and Daddy told me about.
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    Mommy and Daddy told me that if I worked hard,
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    I'd have a good career. So, if you work hard
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    and have a good career, if you work really, really, really hard,
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    you'll have a great career. Doesn't that, like,
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    mathematically make sense?"
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    Hmm. Not. (Laughter)
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    But you've managed to talk yourself into that.
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    You know what? Here's a little secret.
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    You want to work? You want to work really, really, really hard?
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    You know what? You'll succeed. The world will give you
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    the opportunity to work really, really, really, really hard,
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    but are you so sure that that's going to give you
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    a great career when all the evidence is to the contrary?
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    So let's assume, let's deal with those of you
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    who are trying to find your passion.
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    You actually understand that you really had better do it,
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    never mind the excuses. You're trying to find your passion,
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    and you're so happy.
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    You found something you're interested in.
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    I have an interest! I have an interest! You tell me.
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    You say, "I have an interest!" I say, "That's wonderful!
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    And what, what are you trying to tell me? That you — "
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    "Well, I have an interest."
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    I say, "Do you have passion?"
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    "I have an interest," you say.
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    Your interest is compared to what?
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    "Well, I'm interested in this."
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    And what about the rest of humanity's activities?
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    "I'm not interested in them."
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    You've looked at them all, have you?
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    "No. Not exactly."
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    Passion is your greatest love.
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    Passion is the thing that will help you create
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    the highest expression of your talent.
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    Passion, interest -- it's not the same thing.
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    Are you really going to go to your sweetie and say,
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    "Marry me! You're interesting." (Laughter)
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    Won't happen. Won't happen, and you will die alone. (Laughter)
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    What you want, what you want, what you want,
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    is passion. It is beyond interest.
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    You need 20 interests, and then one of them,
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    one of them might grab you, one of them might engage you
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    more than anything else, and then you may have found
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    your greatest love in comparison to all the other things
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    that interest you, and that's what passion is.
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    I have a friend, proposed to his sweetie.
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    He was an economically rational person.
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    He said to his sweetie, "Let us marry.
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    Let us merge our interests."
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    (Laughter)
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    Yes he did.
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    "I love you truly," he said. "I love you deeply. I love you
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    more than any other woman I've ever encountered.
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    I love you more than Mary, Jane, Susie, Penelope,
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    Ingrid, Gertrude, Gretel --
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    I was on a German exchange program then." (Laughter)
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    "I love you more than — "
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    All right! She left the room halfway through his enumeration
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    of his love for her.
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    After he got over his surprise at being, you know,
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    turned down, he concluded he'd had a narrow escape
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    from marrying an irrational person,
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    although he did make a note to himself that the next time
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    he proposed, it was perhaps not necessary to enumerate
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    all of the women he had auditioned for the part. (Laughter)
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    But the point stands. You must look for alternatives
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    so that you find your destiny,
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    or are you afraid of the word "destiny"?
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    Does the word "destiny" scare you?
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    That's what we're talking about, and if you don't find
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    the highest expression of your talent, if you settle
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    for "interesting," what the hell ever that means,
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    do you know what will happen at the end of your long life?
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    Your friends and family will be gathered in the cemetery,
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    and there, beside your gravesite will be a tombstone,
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    and inscribed on that tombstone, it will say,
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    "Here lies a distinguished engineer who invented Velcro."
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    But what that tombstone should have said,
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    in an alternative lifetime,
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    what it should have said if it was your highest expression of
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    talent, was, "Here lies the last Nobel Laureate in Physics,
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    who formulated the Grand Unified Field Theory
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    and demonstrated the practicality of warp drive."
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    (Laughter)
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    Velcro, indeed. (Laughter)
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    One was a great career.
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    One was a missed opportunity.
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    But then, there are some of you,
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    in spite of all these excuses, you will find,
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    you will find your passion,
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    and you'll still fail.
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    You're going to fail, because,
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    because you're not going to do it,
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    because you will have invented a new excuse,
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    any excuse to fail to take action, and this excuse
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    I've heard so many times.
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    "Yes, I would pursue a great career, but I value
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    human relationships more than accomplishment.
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    I want to be a great friend. I want to be a great spouse.
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    I want to be a great parent, and I will not sacrifice them
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    on the altar of great accomplishment."
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    (Laughter)
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    What do you want me to say?
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    Now, do you really want me to say now, tell you,
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    "Really, I swear I don't kick children." (Laughter)
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    Hmm? Look at the worldview you've given yourself.
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    You're a hero no matter what, and I, by suggesting,
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    ever so delicately, that you might want a great career,
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    must hate children. I don't hate children. I don't kick them.
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    Yes, there was a little kid wandering through this building
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    when I came here, and no, I didn't kick him. (Laughter)
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    Course, I had to tell him that the building was for adults only
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    and to get out.
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    He mumbled something about his mother,
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    and I told him she'd probably find him outside anyway.
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    Last time I saw him, he was on the stairs crying. (Laughter)
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    What a wimp. (Laughter)
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    But what do you mean? That's what you expect me to say.
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    You really think, you really think it's appropriate
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    that you should actually take
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    children and use them as a shield?
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    You know what will happen someday,
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    you, you ideal parent, you?
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    The kid will come to you someday and say,
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    "I know what I want to be.
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    I know what I'm going to do with my life."
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    You are so happy. It's the conversation
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    a parent wants to hear, because your kid's good in math,
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    and you know you're going to like what comes next.
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    Says your kid, "I have decided
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    I want to be a magician.
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    I want to perform magic tricks on the stage."
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    (Laughter)
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    And what do you say?
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    You say, you say,
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    "Umm ... that's risky, kid.
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    Might fail, kid. Don't make a lot of money at that, kid.
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    You know, I don't know, kid,
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    you should think about that again, kid,
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    you're so good at math, why don't you — "
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    And the kid interrupts you, and says,
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    "But it is my dream. It is my dream to do this."
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    And what are you going to say?
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    You know what you're going to say?
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    "Look kid. I had a dream once, too, but -- but."
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    So how are you going to finish the sentence with your "but"?
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    "... But. I had a dream too, once, kid, but I was afraid to pursue it."
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    Or, are you going to tell him this?
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    "I had a dream once, kid.
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    But then you were born." (Laughter)
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    (Laughter) (Applause)
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    Do you, do you really want to use your family,
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    do you really ever want to look at your spouse
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    and your kid and see your jailers?
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    There was something you could have said to your kid
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    when he or she said, "I have a dream."
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    You could have said, looked the kid in the face, and said,
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    "Go for it, kid,
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    just like I did."
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    But you won't be able to say that
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    because you didn't. So you can't. (Laughter)
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    And so the sins of the parents
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    are visited on the poor children.
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    Why will you seek refuge in human relationships
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    as your excuse not to find and pursue your passion?
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    You know why.
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    In your heart of hearts, you know why,
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    and I'm being deadly serious.
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    You know why you would get all warm and fuzzy
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    and wrap yourself up in human relationships.
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    It is because you are —
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    You know what you are.
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    You're afraid to pursue your passion.
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    You're afraid to look ridiculous.
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    You're afraid to try. You're afraid you may fail.
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    Great friend, great spouse, great parent, great career.
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    Is that not a package? Is that not who you are?
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    How can you be one without the other?
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    But you're afraid.
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    And that's why you're not going to have a great career, unless --
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    unless, that most evocative of all English words --
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    unless.
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    But the unless word is also attached
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    to that other, most terrifying phrase,
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    "If only I had ... "
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    "If only I had ... "
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    If you ever have that thought ricocheting in your brain,
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    it will hurt a lot.
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    So, those are the many reasons
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    why you are going to fail
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    to have a great career,
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    unless ...
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    Unless.
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    Thank you. (Applause)
Title:
Why you will fail to have a great career
Speaker:
Larry Smith
Description:

In this funny and blunt talk, Larry Smith pulls no punches when he calls out the absurd excuses people invent when they fail to pursue their passions.
(Filmed at TEDxUW.)

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
15:15

English subtitles

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