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6 Ways To Identify Your Core Passion & Build A Career Around It
June 17, 2015 by Jeff Roberts collective evolution
Life seems to have a plan for us even before we know it. In fact, our paths are often so well laid out for us that before we know it, we’ve signed up for some sort of ambiguous university degree.
This happened to me. I chose to study dental hygiene because 1) it offered a good-looking salary and 2) the city I grew up in offered the program. Naturally, I did what was expected.
Thankfully though, I’m a quitter. With only one year left to finish, I decided to walk away from my career as an oral hygienist because 1) the stress of it was expediting my hair loss and 2) I was very unhappy.
So, I listened to my “intuition,” or common sense as some may call it, and left the program. Eventually, I re-kindled my childhood love for writing to mitigate my shame for leaving school, never with the intention of building a career out of it, of course, because how many writers actually get paid for their work? But somehow, after embracing my inner quitter and picking up an improbable hobby, I rolled two doubles and landed on free parking, or, in layman’s terms – I got hired as a writer.
Turning your passion into a lucrative career may seem impossible at times, and if your passion involves creativity it may seem just plain “stupid” to try and tackle, but there are methods to help make your dreams a reality that anyone can apply if you are finally ready and determined to make things happen in your life. Let me elaborate.
1) Ask yourself what made you happiest when you were young and naive.

2) Think about the skills you love to use.

3) What do you want to accomplish with your talents?
The goal: find out how or what you want to accomplish with your skills/talents. Are you a writer who wants to make people laugh? Are you a jeweler who would love nothing more than for your creations to make girls swoon? Are you a listener who simply wants to help others? Whatever the case, be clear with your intention, then write it down so you see it every day. For example: “I desire to find a fulfilling career as a baker/blogger, where my healthy but aesthetically pleasing recipes will make eating decisions easy for other home-makers.” Then, start networking extensively to help you land a role that will give you the chance to support those causes and areas which most matter to you. When you write your intentions down and see them in front of you, magic happens. If you don’t believe in whimsical life anecdotes like this, then fine, live your life without ever really trying “light-as-a-feather” with your friends after having just finished watching the cult classic The Craft, which, by the way they are re-making….
4) Learn how to make moola with your craft.
Make others know how good you are at what you do. Network, join meetup groups, be friendly to people you normally wouldn’t be, read books from people who made it in your passion’s line of work, become inundated in how to present yourself and sell yourself, even if this means preparing and memorizing certain hooks that you can say to people in situations where you can get a gig. This week, brainstorm 30 new ways you can use and apply your immense talents to help others succeed and organizations grow and flourish. Then start sharing your vision for helping others with everyone you know, and asking people to connect you with others who might be helpful to speak with. Here is some advice for creative people who may not understand the business side of things, always ask yourself this question in any situation where you find yourself trying to sell your idea or craft to someone else: What’s in this for you, and what’s in this for me? Please, write that one down.
5) Confidence is key.

6) Ask for help sometimes.

I hope that this has inspired you in some way, and I assume that if you are ready to make your dreams come true, you now have some homework to do. So, on that note, I’ll leave you with a cliché to help you get inspired.
“Cherish your visions and your dreams, as they are the children of your soul; the blueprints of your ultimate achievements.” Napoleon Hill

