I have my passion in life but I didn't use it in my chosen work. Maybe, it's the reason too that I did not succeed in my career life but I believe work and passion combined to be such a good one.
For as long as I can remember, I’ve never had a clear sense of what I want to do with my life. I’ve always thought you have to have one job or career until you retire because that’s what successful people seem to have.
The trouble is I’m passionate about a lot of things, so I’ve never liked the idea of sticking with the same job forever. It’s been a journey to figure out which they don’t have to, by the way, but it is possible if you’re clear on what your passions are.
There are also people who tell me they have so many passions that they don’t know if they should pursue one or the other.
If you’re totally lost when it comes to identifying your passions or you can’t figure out how your different passions complement each other.
Why Is It So Hard To Identify Your Passions?
After my school, I was left feeling pretty confused about the type of job to pursue. I always loved writing, but I didn’t want to go into journalism. I was pretty tech-savvy, but I didn’t want to go into the tech field. I was fascinated with health and wellness, but I didn’t want to be a nutritionist.
I couldn’t figure out what to do with my passions, so I put them on hold while I worked at a job that I couldn’t say I was passionate about.
Often we find it difficult to identify or embrace our passions because of a few things:
1. Self-Doubt
You doubt that the things you’re passionate about will get you anywhere in life, so you bury your interests and passions deep inside.
2. The Wrong Mindset
You focus too much on how your passions can make you money, and that mindset only creates resistance towards embracing your passions.
3. Overthinking
You’re caught up trying to figure out exactly what you’re passionate about so you miss the obvious signs right in front of your face.
If you get honest with yourself and focus on what you love doing, what you’re good at, and what fascinates you, you might just find that your passions have been there all along.
“Your passion is right in front of your face. If you have to look for it, then you’re probably not passionate about it at all.”
– Mark Manson
How To Identify Your Passions
Figuring out what you’re passionate about shouldn’t be a stressful experience. After all, these are the things that bring you joy and fulfillment in life. Use the following questions and resources to help you identify your passions.
Questions to Ask Yourself:
Without putting too much pressure on your answers, think of how you would respond to the following questions:
What did you spend your free time doing when you were younger?
What were you good at when you were in school? This doesn’t have to be academic-related. Think about clubs or activities you participated in too.
What are you curious about? What are you always trying to learn more about?
What could you talk about for hours on end? What do you already know a lot about without having to do any research?
What do you do every single day with ease that others might not want to or be able to do? What activities or tasks make you lose track of time when you’re doing them?
Ways to find passion
A list of ways to get you thinking about what you’re curious about, what you hate doing, and what your ideal life would look like all to help you identify your passions.
How Do I Use My Passions?
Once you’ve figured out what your passions really are, the challenge is knowing what to do with them. Do you cultivate them as hobbies? Do you try to turn one of them into your life’s work?
The Money Question
There’s a lot of pressure to feel like you need to make something out of your passions and that they should ultimately become your career, but your passions don’t need to be a money-making opportunity. They can just be a creative outlet for you.
In my opinion, you should cultivate your passions regardless of whether you make money from them or not. What you’re passionate about sets you apart from other people and makes you who you are. It’s important to cultivate your passion in order to live in alignment with what really fulfills and excites you.
If you do want to make your passions into a career, Aileen from Lavendaire made a video of ikigai which is a Japanese concept that means “a reason for being”. It combines what you love doing, what you’re good at, what the world needs, and what you can get paid for. This is a great way to identify what your career sweet spot might look like.
My advice is to explore your passions as much as you can. The important thing is to not get stuck in your own head without ever taking action on what you truly love doing.
What If I’m Multi-Passionate?
Many of us are multi-passionate, and we’re constantly trying to find ways to mesh our interests and skills together. Often it doesn’t feel like we can ever do that because our passions are random and unrelated to one another.
If you are trying to make money from your passions, it can be pretty difficult to mesh them together into something cohesive. At the same time, it might be exactly what the world needs.
Sometimes you have to think outside of the box or simply stop trying to force your passions into work. Life often gives you just what you need in a way you could never have planned for at the exact time that you need it.
What Are Your Passions In Life?
I hope this shows you that there are so many ways to bring your passions together in a way that is fulfilling to you. It’s not always a straightforward process, but hopefully you have more clarity around your goals for the future after reading this post.
This is all very true, I have a few passions, but some of them like dancing I know are purely for my enjoyment. I don’t even want to learn how to lead, even though it would be beneficial, because I want to just enjoy my time connecting with my dance partner and the music instead of being in charge and planning what moves to make.
Other things, like writing, I have translated into a business. Coupled with freelance proofreading I hope that it will one day give me a decent income, but I definitely write better articles when I’m just inspired about a topic and want to share what I’ve learned with my readers compared to if I try to purposedly monetize it. I really see the difference, so my plan for this year is to focus on what attracts readers my passion and authenticity.