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For long-term fulfillment, young professionals should prioritize cultivating 'eulogy virtues' (character, integrity, kindness) over 'resume virtues' (accomplishments, titles). The pursuit of virtue is a controllable, lifelong process that builds self-worth, whereas ambition and external success are unpredictable.
Many professionals tie their identity to performance-based job titles, leading to burnout. A key to a fulfilling and sustainable career is to separate 'who you are' from 'what you do,' allowing you to define success on your own terms, not by what your role dictates.
Tying your identity to professional success creates a fragile self-worth that shatters when that career ends. Instead, anchor your value in your character—how you treat people and how they speak of you. This creates an unshakeable foundation that persists beyond any professional win or loss.
Tying self-worth to professional achievements is a trap. True validation comes from your character and how you handle adversity—things invisible to the public. Detaching self-worth from outcomes creates an unshakeable sense of self.
Achieving goals provides only fleeting satisfaction. The real, compounding reward is the person you become through the journey. The pursuit of difficult things builds lasting character traits like resilience and discipline, which is the true prize, not the goal itself.
When eulogized, a person's career accomplishments are footnotes. The core of their legacy is their character—how they behaved and treated others—and their service. This reality should inform how we prioritize our daily actions, focusing on behavior over status or material success.
To balance external pressures for achievement with an internal quest for meaning, dedicate yourself to becoming excellent at things that offer no worldly reward. Pursue mastery in hobbies, relationships, or spiritual practices where the satisfaction is purely intrinsic, detaching your sense of self-worth from your career.
Society's metrics for success (money, looks) are a losing game. Instead, create your own pedestal based on qualities you value, like kindness or loyalty. This makes self-worth internally driven and unassailable because you are the judge and jury.
A former Goldman leader advised new partners to build a life so rich that if their obituary were nine paragraphs long, no more than three would be about their career. This advice frames work as just one part of a well-rounded life, encouraging philanthropy, diverse relationships, and other pursuits.
Goals (e.g., "be a doctor," "be happy") are outcome-focused and can lead to frustration if not achieved. Intentions (e.g., "act with kindness") are process-focused and within your control in any moment. Centering your life on intentions creates a stable internal anchor, regardless of your job title or external circumstances.
Many professionals chase titles and salaries ("acquisition"). True career satisfaction comes from choosing roles that align with personal values and desired lifestyle ("alignment"). Chasing acquisition leads to a short-term sugar rush of success followed by professional emptiness.