Transcriber: Camille Martínez Reviewer: Lalla Khadija Tigha
I want to discuss with you this afternoon
why you're going to fail to have a great career.
(Laughter)
End of the day, it's ready for dismal remarks.
I only want to talk to those of you who want a great career.
I know some of you have already decided you want a good career.
(Laughter)
Because -- goodness, you're all cheery about failing.
(Laughter)
(Laughter)
Those trying to have good careers are going to fail,
because, really, good jobs are now disappearing.
There are great jobs and great careers,
and then there are the high-workload,
high-stress, bloodsucking, soul-destroying kinds of jobs,
and practically nothing in-between.
So people looking for good jobs are going to fail.
I want to talk about those looking for great jobs, great careers,
First reason is that no matter how many times people tell you,
"If you want a great career, you have to pursue your passion,
you have to pursue your dreams, you have to pursue
the greatest fascination in your life,"
you hear it again and again, and then you decide not to do it.
It doesn't matter how many times you download
Steven J.'s Stanford commencement address,
you still look at it and decide not to do it.
I'm not quite sure why you decide not to do it.
You're too lazy to do it. It's too hard.
You're afraid if you look for your passion and don't find it,
you'll feel like you're an idiot, so then you make excuses
about why you're not going to look for your passion.
They are excuses, ladies and gentlemen.
We're going to go through a whole long list --
your creativity in thinking of excuses not to do what you really need to do
if you want to have a great career.
So, for example, one of your great excuses is:
(Sigh)
"Well, great careers are really and truly, for most people,
So I'm going to stand around, I'm going to try to be lucky,
and if I'm lucky, I'll have a great career.
If not, I'll have a good career."
But a good career is an impossibility, so that's not going to work.
"Yes, there are special people who pursue their passions,
When I was five, I thought I was a genius,
but my professors have beaten that idea out of my head long since."
(Laughter)
"And now I know I am completely competent."
Now, you see, if this was 1950,
that would have given you a great career.
This is almost 2012, and saying to the world,
"I am totally, completely competent,"
is damning yourself with the faintest of praise.
And then, of course, another excuse:
"Well, I would do this, I would do this, but, but --
well, after all, I'm not weird.
Everybody knows that people who pursue their passions
You know, a fine line between madness and genius.
"I'm not weird. I've read Steven J.'s biography.
Oh my goodness -- I'm not that person. I am nice.
I'm a nice, normal person, and nice, normal people --
(Laughter)
"Ah, but I still want a great career.
I'm not prepared to pursue my passion,
so I know what I'm going to do,
It's the one Mommy and Daddy told me about.
Mommy and Daddy told me that if I worked hard,
So, if you work hard and have a good career,
if you work really, really, really hard,
Doesn't that, like, mathematically make sense?"
But you've managed to talk yourself into that.
You know what? Here's a little secret:
You want to work? You want to work really, really, really hard?
You know what? You'll succeed.
The world will give you the opportunity
to work really, really, really, really hard.
that that's going to give you a great career,
when all the evidence is to the contrary?
So let's deal with those of you who are trying to find your passion.
You actually understand that you really had better do it,
You're trying to find your passion --
(Sigh)
You found something you're interested in.
"I have an interest! I have an interest!"
You say, "I have an interest!" I say, "That's wonderful!
And what are you trying to tell me?"
"I have an interest," you say.
"Your interest is compared to what?"
"Well, I'm interested in this."
"And what about the rest of humanity's activities?"
"I'm not interested in them."
"You've looked at them all, have you?"
"No. Not exactly."
Passion is your greatest love.
that will help you create the highest expression of your talent.
Passion, interest -- it's not the same thing.
Are you really going to go to your sweetie and say,
"Marry me! You're interesting."
(Laughter)
Won't happen, and you will die alone.
(Laughter)
You need 20 interests, and then one of them,
one of them might engage you more than anything else,
and then you may have found your greatest love,
in comparison to all the other things that interest you,
I have a friend, proposed to his sweetie.
He was an economically rational person.
He said to his sweetie, "Let us marry.
(Laughter)
"I love you truly," he said. "I love you deeply.
I love you more than any other woman I've ever encountered.
I love you more than Mary, Jane, Susie, Penelope,
I was on a German exchange program then.
halfway through his enumeration of his love for her.
After he got over his surprise at being, you know, turned down,
he concluded he'd had a narrow escape
from marrying an irrational person.
Although, he did make a note to himself that the next time he proposed,
to enumerate all of the women he had auditioned for the part.
(Laughter)
You must look for alternatives so that you find your destiny,
or are you afraid of the word "destiny"?
Does the word "destiny" scare you?
That's what we're talking about.
And if you don't find the highest expression of your talent,
if you settle for "interesting," what the hell ever that means,
do you know what will happen at the end of your long life?
Your friends and family will be gathered in the cemetery,
and there beside your gravesite will be a tombstone,
and inscribed on that tombstone
it will say, "Here lies a distinguished engineer,
But what that tombstone should have said,
what it should have said if it was your highest expression of talent,
was, "Here lies the last Nobel Laureate in Physics,
who formulated the Grand Unified Field Theory
and demonstrated the practicality of warp drive."
(Laughter)
(Laughter)
But then, there are some of you who,
in spite of all these excuses, you will find,
You're going to fail, because --
because you're not going to do it,
because you will have invented a new excuse,
any excuse to fail to take action,
and this excuse, I've heard so many times:
"Yes, I would pursue a great career,
but, I value human relationships --
(Laughter)
on the altar of great accomplishment."
(Laughter)
Now, do you really want me to say now, tell you,
"Really, I swear I don't kick children."
(Laughter)
Look at the worldview you've given yourself.
And I, by suggesting ever so delicately
that you might want a great career, must hate children.
I don't hate children. I don't kick them.
Yes, there was a little kid wandering through this building
when I came here, and no, I didn't kick him.
(Laughter)
Course, I had to tell him the building was for adults only,
He mumbled something about his mother,
and I told him she'd probably find him outside anyway.
Last time I saw him, he was on the stairs crying.
(Laughter)
(Laughter)
But what do you mean? That's what you expect me to say.
Do you really think it's appropriate
that you should actually take children and use them as a shield?
You know what will happen someday,
The kid will come to you someday and say,
I know what I'm going to do with my life."
It's the conversation a parent wants to hear,
because your kid's good in math,
and you know you're going to like what comes next.
"I have decided I want to be a magician.
I want to perform magic tricks on the stage."
(Laughter)
Might fail, kid. Don't make a lot of money at that, kid.
I don't know, kid, you should think about that again, kid.
You're so good at math, why don't you --"
The kid interrupts you and says,
"But it is my dream. It is my dream to do this."
And what are you going to say?
You know what you're going to say?
"Look kid. I had a dream once, too, but --
But --"
So how are you going to finish the sentence with your "but"?
"But. I had a dream too, once, kid, but I was afraid to pursue it."
Or are you going to tell him this:
(Laughter)
(Applause)
Do you really want to use your family,
do you really ever want to look at your spouse and your kid,
There was something you could have said to your kid,
when he or she said, "I have a dream."
looked the kid in the face and said,
But you won't be able to say that,
(Laughter)
And so the sins of the parents
are visited on the poor children.
Why will you seek refuge in human relationships
as your excuse not to find and pursue your passion?
In your heart of hearts, you know why,
You know why you would get all warm and fuzzy
and wrap yourself up in human relationships.
You're afraid to pursue your passion.
You're afraid to look ridiculous.
Great friend, great spouse, great parent, great career.
Is that not a package? Is that not who you are?
How can you be one without the other?
And that's why you're not going to have a great career.
Unless --
"unless," that most evocative of all English words --
"unless."
But the "unless" word is also attached
to that other, most terrifying phrase,
If you ever have that thought ricocheting in your brain,
So, those are the many reasons
Unless --
(Applause)