randomdude96
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- Oct 22, 2011
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waterboy
come on there's just a little bit mre to it than thatJust do what you want. If you fail, get up and do something else.
Nopecome on there's just a little bit mre to it than that
haha 'doing what you want' should be your life's priority, not doing what you think you should be doing merely because it's the safest optionWell "doing what you want" can severely limit your other options. If you spend half your life going after some unacheivable goal and then fail, you can't just walk sraight into teh career you would have had if you had pursued it from the beginning.
So throwing away opportunities, failing, and then having to do a shitty job because you didn't go to uni is a good thing?The problem with your assertion is that you assume that failure is a bad thing.
It has nothing to do with pessimism. The reality is that only a minuscule number of people can ever become F1 drivers and I'm not particularly talented at driving. It doesn't matter how optimistic I am, the odds are inherently tiny.Of course there's going to be a 99.99999% chance that you're never going to succeed if your outlook on life is full of negativity and pessimism. So yeah, maybe stay in uni.
I can't stop laughing hahaha. Man, if you want that sort of life then you can keep it. To me it seems like a terrible way to live.So throwing away opportunities, failing, and then having to do a shitty job because you didn't go to uni is a good thing?
It has nothing to do with pessimism. The reality is that only a minuscule number of people can ever become F1 drivers and I'm not particularly talented at driving. It doesn't matter how optimistic I am, the odds are inherently tiny.
Acting in a way that maximises your happiness is a terrible way to live. Got it.To me it seems like a terrible way to live.
Having a business that fails is not analogous to embarking upon an unrealistic career path. It doesn't ruin your ability to do other things you enjoy.There's a reason that failure is celebrated in Silicon Valley. You're supposed to take something away from it and grow.
Implying that anything other than my absolute dream job is a shit job.You're not supposed to crawl into a hole and punish yourself with a shit job for the rest of your life.
I'm not "throwing away an "opportunity". I don't have an "opportunity" to become an F1 driver any more than I have the "opportunity" to bang Kate Upton.You're throwing away the opportunity to actually wake up every day and work on something you care about instead of being confined to being a drone.
I never said that. My point is is that if I go to uni, the chances of me getting a job I like after WAYYYY higher than if I try and find a job after spending half my life not getting into F1 and not having any qualifications or skills.The second problem with your assertion is that you assume that uni automatically entitles you to a good job and security.
bahahah, yeah, becoming a lawyer is remotely as difficult as becoming an F1 driver.Going to uni and attempting to find employment is a risk in itself. Ask any aspiring banker or lawyer.
well okay it doesn't matter how your mindset is or how persistent you are, some things are by their inherent nature overwhelmingly unrealistic.It has less to do with optimism and more to do with persistence and the right mind set. Maybe I should have qualified my original statement with that.
"To me it seems like a terrible way to live."just do whatever you want even if it's not the thing you *ultimately* want. a