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What you choose to do in your free time, without any external pressure, often reveals your true passions. Bill Gurley suggests paying close attention to these hobbies, as they can be a powerful clue that you should be pursuing that interest as your full-time profession.
Many executives spend significant time on hobbies like golf or hunting. John Morgan rejects this, stating, 'I don't hunt deer, I hunt money.' He dedicates his free time to spotting opportunities and building new ventures, treating business creation itself as his primary hobby and source of enjoyment.
Instead of the risky "follow your dreams" mantra, a more sustainable approach is to treat your unique talents and interests as sacred. Nurture them by choosing a career that allows you time and space to engage with them, rather than betting your entire livelihood on them succeeding.
To find your true calling, divide your life into five-year increments. For each block, list what you loved doing and what others said you excelled at. The seven or so themes that repeatedly emerge point directly to your core purpose and passion, which often get lost in the pursuit of money.
Discovering what you genuinely enjoy requires breaking out of your corporate mindset, much like physical therapy for a forgotten muscle. You must force yourself into uncomfortable, unfamiliar situations—like free tango classes or random online courses—to build the 'muscle memory' for passion and exploration.
To use the Japanese concept of Ikigai for true fulfillment, remove the "what you can be paid for" component. Instead, focus on the intersection of what you love, what you're good at, and what the world needs. This subtle but powerful modification helps separate your life's purpose from your job.
A powerful redefinition of success is moving away from an identity centered on your profession. The ultimate goal is to cultivate a life so rich with hobbies, passions, and relationships that your job becomes the least interesting aspect of who you are, merely a bystander to a well-lived life.
The perfect business for you might be hidden in the activities you turn to when avoiding other work, like designing or editing videos. Turning these procrastination habits into a service capitalizes on your innate interests and skills, making work feel less like a chore.
Instead of generic interview questions, ask what truly motivates a candidate and what they'd do for a hobby if money weren't an issue. The way they describe these passions reveals their energy, personality, and core drivers far more effectively than rehearsed answers about work experience.
Instead of searching for a predefined passion, identify the topics you have an insatiable and uncontrollable curiosity about. This innate interest is the strongest signal of what your life's work could be, even if it seems unconventional.
Your unique advantage is hidden in activities you find intrinsically fun but others see as a grind. Pay attention to what you do in your "5 to 9" that seems irrational or obsessive. This "play" is often a signal of a natural talent that can be leveraged professionally.