anything goes with emma chamberlain - finding your career path, advice session
Episode Date: August 11, 2024welcome back to advice session, a series here on anything goes where you send in your current dilemmas or anything you want advice on, and i give you my unprofessional advice. today's topic is finding... your career path. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome back to Advice Session, a series here on Anything Goes where you send in your current dilemmas or anything you want advice on,
and I give you my unprofessional advice. And today's topic is finding your career path.
I must say my career path has been very unusual for obvious reasons. Number one, I started very young.
I started on the career path that I'm still on at age 16, which is
sort of unusual because most people get their first job at age 16 and then ultimately leave
that career path completely. My situation has been a bit different where I started at
age 16 and stayed on the same path the entire time. And then on top of that, my job is sort
of being an online public figure, which is a very weird job that didn't even exist 20 or 30 years ago. Maybe even 15 years ago. I don't.
Well, what year is it? Okay. Yeah, I don't even think being an online public figure was a possible job even 15 years ago. So it's new. We're still learning about, you know, how long you can do it, how
much potential is in it. It's a very new world. So my career path has been very unusual. For
that reason, I say, take my advice with a grain of salt. My advice might either be really
good as a result of my unusual career path or really bad as a result of my unusual career
path. We'll find out together.
Although I think we should all take all advice with a grain of salt at all times, regardless
of various variables. I think it's always good to take advice with a grain of salt.
But today, maybe take it with an extra large grain of salt considering my unusual career
path thus far. But maybe my advice will be great. We'll find out together.
Let's get started.
This episode is brought to you by Monopoly Go.
The summer of sport is on and I'm totally feeling the competitive spirit.
You know, I'm not always competitive, but every once in a while it comes out of me.
Like for example, when I go to a workout class, deep down I'm always trying to run faster
than the person next to me, lift heavier weights than the person next to me.
Certain things bring out my competitive streak.
That's why Monopoly Go is a perfect game for me.
It's an awesome mobile twist on classic Monopoly,
where you build your empire and go for the gold
to win anywhere, anytime.
Over 150 million players have downloaded it.
You can connect with friends
or make new friends with players all around the world.
You can play events together or just smash their landmarks,
pull bank heists or charge them rent,
just like in classic Monopoly.
It's your chance to be the number one tycoon.
And you know, have a little gloat.
Make your move and download Monopoly Go now, free on the App Store and Google Play.
This episode is brought to you by Airbnb.
One of my favorite trips is a trip to Palm Springs with my friends.
You know, I don't live very far away from Palm Springs.
It's a short two hour drive away.
But what made it so special was our Airbnb.
It was just a little weekend trip,
but getting to stay all together in one house
made it particularly memorable.
It was the perfect balance of privacy and community,
and we were able to sort of live normally.
Cooked dinner, watched TV,
we all hung out by the pool together.
Airbnb also has something called guest favorites.
All of the most loved homes on Airbnb
based on reviews and reliability
and are rated above 4.9 stars on average.
I've used this many times when booking Airbnbs
because it sorts it through to the best.
I am very much looking forward to my next Airbnb trip.
I'll let you know where I go.
With Uber Reserve, you can book your Uber ride in advance.
90 days in advance.
Perfect for all you forward thinkers and planning gurus.
Reserve your Uber ride up to 90 days in advance.
Uber Reserve, see Uber app for details.
Somebody said, what to do when feeling like you've chosen
the complete wrong career path.
I've experienced this myself.
And what I've noticed within myself is that the most challenging thing to accept when
questioning one's career path is, does this mean I'm a failure?
Is this going to set me back years and years and years?
Is this going to destroy my life?
It's accepting the feeling
of failure. That's the hardest part about figuring out whether or not you've chosen
the right career path is getting over the fact that if you determine that you have in
fact chosen the wrong career path, that might mean that you're a failure.
I think my first piece of advice is to try to get over that feeling, to prove to yourself
that choosing the wrong career path does not mean failing in your career overall.
We make bad decisions all the time.
Making a bad decision, making a mistake is not what determines... Everybody does it
in one area or another, including people who have insanely successful careers.
It's not about making a mistake.
It's not about making the wrong choice the first time.
It's about what you do next.
I really do believe that.
And some people might say, no, that's looking at things
in a toxically positive way.
Like sometimes that's not the case.
Sometimes making the wrong choice with your career path the first time is the downfall
of one's career for the rest of their life.
I don't really know if I believe that.
I think that we can make a wrong choice, pivot, and flourish.
I actually think that failure tends to come from realizing that you've made a mistake,
realizing that you made the wrong choice, and then not pivoting. I feel like that's when failure tends to come from realizing that you've made a mistake, realizing that you made the wrong
choice, and then not pivoting. I feel like that's when failure tends to happen. I feel like that's
what failure is, is to sort of settle and not make a plan to change when you know that change is
necessary. So I feel like it's a sign of a successful career path when you realize, huh,
this isn't working. I need to make some
changes. I feel like that's a green flag. I feel like that's a good thing.
So I would say my first piece of advice is to change your mindset on what pivoting your
career means about you. It does not mean that you're a failure. It just means that it didn't
work out the first time and that you want to try something else.
So I think eradicating all negative feelings about pivoting is really important because
it allows you to be honest with yourself about whether it's working or not.
If you're living in a state where you believe that pivoting your career path means that
you failed, then you're so much less likely to come to the conclusion that you need to pivot.
And sometimes that's a really important conclusion to come to.
And staying in something or continuing to work towards something that is ultimately not right for you
is not leading you to a successful place.
Because I would argue that a successful career is, in my opinion, okay, a career that supports you financially
in a way that's comfortable,
in a way that you're satisfied with.
Now that looks different for everyone, okay?
For some people, that's being incredibly wealthy.
Some people, I mean, obviously nobody's like,
I don't want money.
Like nobody has ever said that, okay?
But everybody's financial goal is a little bit different.
My dad, for example, he has far lower financial goals than my mom.
So growing up, it was very interesting because my dad was like, I just want to make enough
money to live in the way that I'm living comfortably, which is nothing extravagant. My dad had no desire growing up to live extravagantly.
He doesn't care about that.
Whereas my mom, I think,
wanted to live a bit more extravagantly.
She wanted to be able to go on fancy vacations.
She wanted to be able to go out
and eat at fancy restaurants more often.
My mom just had a different idea
of what
financial success in career looks like. And so I've seen firsthand how it varies from
person to person. But again, I think the first sort of sign of career success is feeling
satisfied and comfortable with the income that you're making. And then number two, I
think balancing that with a high quality of life
when possible. So again, I saw this sort of differ in my parents. My dad prioritized having
more time off. He was willing to sacrifice making less money to have more time off because
that was something that was important to him. Whereas my mom was willing to work more often and have less time off
to make more money. And that's a balance that she was willing to strike in order to reach
her career goals. So everybody's going to be different, right? But I think it's about
finding your own personal balance between income and quality of life. And that's really
what it comes down to, you know?
I mean, I think it also comes down to
whether or not you want your passion to be your work
or whether you want your passion
to be something outside of work.
That's also a key element,
but that's what I think a successful career is.
It's about analyzing all of these different qualities
of a career and figuring out what is important to you.
And you might realize five, 10 years into your career
that the career path that you've chosen
is not meeting those requirements.
For example, you might be making a comfortable living,
but your quality of life is suffering so much
that it might be time to ask yourself, am I willing to maybe make a little bit less money, but have a better
quality of life for one reason or another? Maybe it's because you having more free time
simply improves your quality of life or because another job might be more social and maybe
that's something that you're looking for in your life. Or maybe a job that pays less money
involves your passion, right? Like let's say you're an artist and you love art. Maybe this other job
is being an art teacher and it makes you less money, but it involves your passion. It'll be
more fulfilling for you overall. Or let's say right now your job involves your passion.
For some people, that doesn't work well. For some people, mixing business with pleasure,
mixing your passion with your job does not work,
and it ruins the passion, right?
And maybe you're like, I don't want to do that anymore.
I want to get a job that pays my bills
so I can do my passion separately
and let it be my passion.
And I don't need to rely on my passion for money.
There's some people who really, really hate that.
And that doesn't work for some people.
All of that being said,
when you feel like you've chosen the wrong career path,
it's just about recalibrating, okay, what do I want?
What is not working now?
And being proactive about changing it.
Because I think we can become almost stuck.
We can become
stuck feeling like, oh, but I've worked for so long on getting to this certain point in
this career and I don't want to be a failure and I don't want to start something. I don't
want to start all over again. None of the time that you've spent working this far has
been a waste.
You've learned so much working on your career thus far that you're going to be an incredible
asset to whatever you choose.
You're already like a few steps ahead, you know, moving into your next venture, trying
something new.
You know, there's going to be things that you don't understand, but you've already learned
more than you realize from your career path thus far.
Pivoting doesn't erase all the things that you've learned thus far, you know?
There are universal things that you learn
from any job that will help you in your next job.
And you might have to work a little bit harder
in the beginning to pivot career paths.
There might be some sacrifices,
but I think ultimately to find a career path
that you are satisfied with is worth it.
And so I think it's worth it.
So I would say, accept that you need to make a change and make a plan to figure out how
to make those changes happen.
Next somebody said, how to be confident starting a new venture.
I'm so scared of failing.
This is going to sound so Pinterest quote-y like I already know I'm about to sound like
a fucking Pinterest quote. You have to accept already know I'm about to sound like a fucking Pinterest quote.
You have to accept that you probably are going to fail.
It's an inevitable truth.
We are all going to fail in this life.
And we're not just going to fail once.
We're going to fail over and over and over again.
And failing is not bad.
Failing is not the thing to fear.
It's how you recover that is most important.
How you pivot when you recover that is most important. How you pivot when
you fail that's most important. So I think to the best of your ability, you must accept
the fact that you might fail. But I think the best thing to do, partnered with accepting
the fact that failure is inevitable, is to make a plan. What am I going to do if I fail?
Okay, let's imagine it. Worst case scenario, I fail. What do I do then? How do I get back on my feet?
And I think about this all the time because my job specifically is very unusual in the
sense that it's based on sort of public opinion, right? Like my job is based on whether or
not people like me. And I'm a human being who's on a journey growing, evolving, changing.
My interests are changing. My personality is changing. I'm not this stagn a human being who's on a journey growing, evolving, changing. My interests are changing.
My personality is changing.
I'm not this stagnant human being who's, you know, if you fall in love with one version
of me, that's what you get for the rest of time.
I cannot exist in that way and nobody should.
And so I'm sort of at risk in my career of potentially falling out of favor at any given
moment with people.
And the second that, you know, people don't like me anymore, which is completely out of
my control, my career is over in theory, right?
So I've thought a lot about, okay, well, what happens if my career ends?
And it used to be really daunting to me, like, what happens if I fail?
But what ended up helping me find peace of mind is making a plan, Like, okay, well, what do I do if this all goes away?
And I found a plan that's honestly equally as fulfilling and beautiful to me
than continuing on with the career I have now.
I love and appreciate and cherish the career I have now,
and I would love to do it for as long as possible.
It will ebb and flow and it will change as I grow older and my interests change and blah, blah, blah. But I would love to stay in this line of work,
if you will, for as long as possible. However, if it does go away, I have a plan that also
sounds delightful. You know, I have another career plan that sounds delightful. And I've
come to terms with the fact that it could fail at any moment. And
because I have this plan of what I will do if it fails, I'm not worried. I really, I've
no fear anymore about what happens if I fail in this career path that I'm in now. And I
really recommend that it's accepting failure and it's making a plan. And when you feel
that security and you aren't afraid of failing anymore, then naturally the confidence seeps in and you're like, fuck it.
I'm, I have nothing to lose starting this new venture because if it does fail,
I already have a plan of what I'm going to try next. And it sounds great.
So I think that that's key.
But also I think another thing that helps with confidence is realizing that
nobody knows everything. When you start a new venture,
you tend to feel like a fish out of water. Like, I don't even know what the fuck's going
on. I don't even know how to survive in this job. I don't know what to do. It's not automatic.
I'm new. Everything's hard right now. Right? And it's very overwhelming. But there's two
things to remember. Number one, not even your boss knows everything.
We all have our strengths and we all have our weaknesses.
We're all hyper focused on our particular strengths and weaknesses.
We're very aware of our duality.
Whereas when we look at our boss or people who have been working at,
you know, a company or working in the same job that we're beginning,
we tend to just see their strengths like, oh, you know, how am I ever going to catch up to them?
They're 50,000 steps ahead of me.
But they also have weaknesses, and don't forget that.
On top of that, they also started somewhere.
They started in the exact position that you're in.
The only way to get to a point where you're really good at something and
it's working is to start from a point where you're a beginner. Everybody starts as a beginner,
every single person. So don't be afraid of starting a new venture. Everybody has been
a beginner before. You're no farther behind anyone else.
This episode is brought to you by Monopoly Go. The summer of sport is on and I'm
totally feeling the competitive spirit. You know, I'm not always competitive, but every once in a
while it comes out of me. Like for example, when I go to a workout class, deep down I'm always trying
to run faster than the person next to me, lift heavier weights than the person next to me.
Certain things bring out my competitive streak.
That's why Monopoly Go is a perfect game for me.
It's an awesome mobile twist on
classic Monopoly where you build your empire and go for
the gold to win anywhere, anytime.
Over 150 million players have downloaded it.
You can connect with friends or make
new friends with players all around the world.
You can play events together or just smash their landmarks, pull bank heists,
or charge them rent, just like in classic Monopoly.
It's your chance to be the number one tycoon.
And you know, have a little gloat.
Make your move and download Monopoly Go now, free on the App Store and Google Play.
Your mom hates it when you leave six half full glasses on your nightstand.
It's a good thing mom lives on the other side of the country.
And it's an even better thing that you can get six IKEA 365 plus glasses for just $9.99.
So go ahead.
You can afford to hoard because IKEA is priced for student life.
Shop everything you need for back to school at IKEA today.
Next, somebody said, how can I actually choose what job I want to do if my options seem so different? How to choose my path? I'm assuming that what this means is how do I narrow down
what career path to actually go with when there are so many different options that
are all so different. Like, for example, going into finance versus going into the arts, right?
Maybe you have interest in both. How do you choose one over the other? I think you need
to get out a piece of paper, okay? And you need to write the pros and cons of each job.
Because it is very hard to compare two things that are so different, right? Like, it's easy to compare
being a music teacher versus being an art teacher. It's like, well, I simply like music more,
or I'm better at art, so I should teach art because I'm better at it. You know what I mean? Like, it's easy to compare two jobs that are in the same category, whereas comparing two polar
opposite jobs, like, oh, I kind of, you know, enjoy numbers and I enjoy math, so maybe I could
go into finance. Or I really love fashion though, too. Maybe I should work in retail, or maybe I
should learn how to design and become a designer. Like, it's hard to compare two jobs that are complete polar opposites.
So I think you have to make a pros and cons list that sort of take it down to its universal qualities.
So for example, let's say you're choosing between a finance job and a job in the arts, okay?
Make a very simplified pros and cons list, okay?
Like the pros of doing a finance job is number one, it pays more.
And number two, you like working with numbers and you like the puzzle that is working with
numbers.
There's something satisfying about that.
You get into the flow state really easily with numbers maybe.
And it's something that you think would be easy to sort of sit down and do every day
because it's something that you enjoy.
In years past when you were doing math homework, that it's something that you enjoy. Like in years past when you
were doing math homework, that was the homework that you really enjoyed actually for some
reason and you would get into the flow state with it and you actually found a lot of joy
in it. But then the cons of a finance job is that you have very few days off and you
fear that you might get sick of it and it might grow old to you very quickly. Whereas
the pros and cons of working in the arts is maybe you have a passion for the arts, so that's a pro and you might
get more days off. But then the cons is that you might not be making as much money as you
would like to be making and maybe it's harder to build on a career in the arts. You can't
maybe go as far in that career. It's harder to build on that career maybe.
Like, okay, from being an art teacher,
where do you go from there?
Okay, maybe being an art professor,
and then maybe ultimately being an artist
and selling your art, but maybe you're like,
ah, I wanna do something bigger
that doesn't feel big enough to me.
Like I want to own my own bank one day or something.
Like, I don't know, if you wanna do something bigger,
maybe working in finance is more appealing to you.
You want to go an entrepreneurial route.
Maybe it's harder to go in an entrepreneurial route when you go down the path of a career
in the arts.
So it's about weighing the pros and cons of the things that are in a way similar between
the two.
Both jobs make money.
Both jobs have hours.
Both jobs impact your quality of life.
Both jobs have varying degrees of social activity, both jobs have legs in terms of whether or
not you're going to get sick of them and how quickly you'll get sick of them or bored of
them.
There's all these things that they do have in common and you can weigh the pros and cons
of both, write them all down and kind of go from there and see what the overwhelming conclusion is. Next, somebody said,
how to start a business? So many ideas, but don't know how or where to start.
I honestly do believe that it's really hard to know where to start without a plan,
which is why I recommend sitting down and really dedicating yourself to making a clear plan, constructing
a clear vision, and stress testing it in every single way possible before getting started.
Now, listen, when starting a business, you're always going to run into roadblocks that you
didn't expect.
You're always going to run into challenges that you didn't expect and pivots and changes
and alterations. It's all going to happen regardless. However, I think the most promising
method for starting a business is to try to get it as locked and loaded as possible before you even
make your first move. Like, you know, design and create your business in every single capacity before you even send
your first email to like a production company who's going to produce your product or whatever.
Or like before you even make your website, before you even buy your website domain, like
have everything planned out.
Like every gray area should be addressed.
That's my recommendation because
I actually think that when I started Chamberlain Coffee, I didn't do that as much. I was kind
of like, I'm going to create a good product, just one, which was these coffee tea bags
sort of things. They're like basically bags to make cold brew with at home with no equipment.
That was the product that I wanted to come out with.
And I sort of did no other planning.
I was like, I'm just going to release this product.
I'm going to make sure the product itself is good.
That's all going to be squared away.
But the actual plan, you know, a year down the line,
a little bit less fleshed out.
And I don't think that that was the right approach.
I think that I should have gone into releasing that first product that was sort of a proof
of concept with a more developed plan for what happens if it does work, right?
Because then once it did work, I sort of had to start from scratch.
Like, okay, wait, now I know that this works.
I want to be in the coffee industry.
It makes sense.
It's working. Okay, now what? And I want to be in the coffee industry. It makes sense. It's working.
Okay, now what?
And I had to build from the ground up.
And I think that it stalled in a way,
the growth of the brand for a year or two there.
It was very hard to scale the brand because we tested,
okay, does my audience want to buy coffee from me?
Okay, the answer is yes.
Okay, now we have to go back to the drawing board
instead of being like, okay, yes. now we can just immediately dive straight into the next
move because we already have all of our plans in place.
So I would really recommend having at least a two-year plan in place before you get started
and be open to the plan changing down the line because again, inevitably things will
need to change.
You know, you'll hit roadblocks you didn't anticipate, you'll have new ideas that are
exciting but have as developed of a plan as possible and then it'll give you an obvious
first step of how to get started.
You know if you have a fully developed plan it's obvious what the first step is.
The first step might be okay I need to research how to make a website, okay I need to research
how to find a production company or manufacturing company to make the product that I want to make.
It becomes obvious what your next steps are once you have a solid plan. Somebody said,
where do you start if you feel like you are living a life with no purpose?
I feel like I have no hopes or dreams and I want them.
Well, I think a lot of times we search for purpose and meaning in the wrong places.
For a long time, I was searching for purpose in career.
I think that's a very common thing in our culture today is finding our purpose in our
jobs.
I don't think that's always a bad thing because I do think that in a way,
it can be great to, like, it's not shitting on that as a goal. However, I think that that
tends to end up falling short because if you make your purpose in life to succeed in your
career, maybe that is to make a lot of money or to reach a certain position at your job,
a certain prestigious position at your job or whatever it may be.
The problem with that is that that is not what ultimately feeds your soul and feeds
your purpose.
Like our purpose as humans tends to be a bit deeper than that.
And I think if you're finding that, you know, you can't find a purpose, you can't find a
goal, you might be looking in the wrong place.
You might be expecting too much out of it.
Like it might be something far more simple than you could ever expect.
For example, what I've realized is that my ultimate goal in life and one of my purposes in life is to make people feel understood in life,
to make people feel less alone in life.
Sounds cringe, sounds corny, whatever,
roll your eyes at me all you want.
But that's something that is really important to me.
And that's something that I have been able to integrate
into my career, absolutely,
which is beautiful and incredible.
However, that purpose extends beyond my career, absolutely, which is beautiful and incredible. However, that
purpose extends beyond my career. If my career were to disappear today, I would continue
to do that in the real world with people that I meet at random cafes and in the grocery
store and friends that I have and family that I have. That purpose extends beyond my career.
That is like something that is just in me that I try to
apply to every single area of my life. Okay. And it's not anything particularly grandiose.
Like I'm not curing diseases or curing depression. I'm not doing anything big and magic.
My goal and my purpose is just to be a comforting presence for people, that is something that is really important to me.
And again, the key to that purpose being something
that can stick is that it goes beyond my career.
Similar to another one of my goals in life
and purposes in life is to hopefully have a family one day.
Right?
Now that has nothing to do with my career.
That is strictly personal, has nothing to do with my career. That is strictly personal,
has nothing to do with my career at all. But that's another purpose that I found. And that
was something that took me a long time to realize. Like for so long, I was like, just
not really thinking about having a family one day or whether or not that was something
that was important to me. But the older I get, the more I cherish
the family that I have now. And the more important it is for me to build my own family when I'm
older as well. And so that's another purpose that I've found. And the thing about that,
that is fulfilling for me is that it's a goal for me that will bring me fulfillment for the rest of my life.
To be able to build a family that even goes beyond
me getting married and having kids,
but also having friends that feel like family
and stuff like that.
That is really important to me
and that's also a purpose for me,
is finding that and cultivating that and building that.
And so I think that my piece of advice to you
is if you feel like you're living a life with no purpose
and you feel like you have no hopes or dreams,
start from the most basic point of like,
okay, what do I enjoy doing?
When do I feel the most fulfilled?
What do I want my life to look like in 30 years?
Ask yourself all of these questions and try to find the simple through lines that aren't like,
again, not moving fucking mountains. We don't have to move mountains. Our purpose in life,
our goal in life does not. And for most people should not be to like fucking move mountains.
But a lot of times we expect that of ourselves. Like, fuck, my purpose should be something
grandiose. Not necessarily. It could literally just be to have a family. That could be
it. And honestly, that's my main purpose at this point is like, you know what? I really want to
have a family. I want to make my own family. And, you know, that's not anything crazy. That's not
anything particularly unique, but it's something that drives me forward.
It's something that gives me a light 10 years down the line.
When it comes to my other sort of purpose, which is making people feel safe and comfortable
and understood, and that being my other sort of personal purpose in life, that's a purpose
that I can integrate that into anything I do in my life,
no matter where my career goes, et cetera, et cetera.
And it's broad enough and it's vague enough
that it can apply to almost anything.
And that's also what I find is so sort of inspiring
about that particular purpose that I've found,
is that it can apply on a large or small scale. So don't put pressure
on yourself to have some sort of grandiose purpose, okay? Your purpose is different than
your fiscal goals, your financial goals. Like it's different. It's different than your career
goals a lot of times. I feel like our purpose in life should be much more broad. And you
know, it might even just be as simple as like, I wanna help people, I wanna be helpful to people.
It might be that simple.
It might be, I wanna be a friend to as many people
as I possibly can, right?
It might be, I wanna prevent bullying.
It could be anything, it could literally be anything,
but these things are so broad that they could apply
to every area of your life.
And I think that that's the key.
Or, I just wanna have a family, I just wanna be a parent. That might of your life. And I think that that's the key. Or, you know, I just want to have a family. I just want to be a parent.
Like that might be your goal.
Like I just want to raise a really incredible child.
That's a great purpose as well.
Anyway, and you can have multiple purposes,
but it's simplifying it, I think,
that can help you determine what it truly is.
Somebody said, I'm not sure what to do with my life.
I have so many interests and can't stick to just one. Well, I think the beauty of life is that we can try everything. And so I'd say my first piece
of advice is to try as many of your interests as possible, right? Like, let's say you love
designing clothes, making coffee as a barista, and this is like the
things that I like to do.
I guess I'm thinking of myself.
And you like coding.
Like you have a random side passion for coding and code or whatever.
Take a few part-time jobs and try all of them.
Or dedicate one year to trying one thing, the next year to trying another,
the next year to trying another.
I recommend trying it all and seeing which one is your favorite in practice.
Which one do you like doing every day?
It's hard to know unless you try it.
And so I would say try everything.
Why not?
You could try everything all at once.
You could try things, you know, you could section it off and try things one at a time.
I mean, if you're in a place in your life where it doesn't make sense to try things one at a time
and you really want to get started on one particular path, maybe figure out, okay, which
one of my interests could just remain a hobby, right? Like, which things make most sense to just
remain a hobby? Okay, well, then those things will just remain a hobby. Which things have the most
potential for, you know, a successful career personally for you? Okay, well, those things will just remain a hobby. Which things have the most potential for a successful career personally for you?
Okay, well then maybe that's the one you pursue.
So I also think it comes down to analyzing each of your interests and figuring out which
one is going to make the most successful career path in your eyes.
Now again, as I described earlier, success looks different for everybody.
For some people, it's about quality of life
and work-life balance.
For some people, it's more about how much money is made.
For some people, it's about whether or not
it ties into their passion in life or their purpose in life.
It's so different for everybody.
And so I think it's about analyzing each of your interests
and figuring out which one actually makes the best job.
Because some of our interests would not be great as a job.
Do you know what I mean?
Like some things actually are more enjoyable
just remaining a hobby or maybe a little side job
that isn't necessarily like something
that makes you a lot of money,
but something that you just do for fun.
I think it's about being really analytical
and really, again, making a plan
and stress testing every
potential way that you could go to figure out the best one. Because I think a lot of times we
forget how helpful it can be to lay everything out and analyze everything before we begin.
A lot of times, I think we want to have a gut feeling or we want to have an intuition.
Sometimes we just don't have that about these decisions.
And so that's when it's important to sit down
and analyze things and figure out
what the most fulfilling choice is going to be.
And you might fuck up the first time
and you might have to scrap that path
and go in a different direction.
But I think that that's the best action to take
when you want to make a choice and you
want to start moving in one particular direction, but you don't know which particular direction
that is.
Somebody said, how to stop overthinking about starting a new career and lifestyle and leaving
the old one behind.
It can be really terrifying to leave a comfortable lifestyle and start something brand new. But I think what's important to remind ourselves
is that very rarely can we not return to our old lifestyle
if we really wanted to.
Like if we really, really wanted to return to the old,
right, if we try something new, very rarely can you not
revert back to what you were doing before.
I mean, don't get me wrong, there are times when it's not an option, and that's far more
challenging psychologically.
But most of the time, if you really wanted to, you could go back.
And so maybe something that could help the overthinking is figuring out a plan.
Okay, if I do want to go back, how can I keep that door open?
And maybe find a plan of how to keep that door open
to the life that you lived before
so that you could go back to it if you wanted to.
And that can help relieve a lot of overthinking.
But also if you're like, no, I can't go back ever,
whether it's because you don't want to go back ever,
or because that door has been shut for some reason
that's out of your control, I think it's about accepting the or because that door has been shut for some reason that's out of your
control. I think it's about accepting the fact that that door is closed. And it's about accepting
that you don't know how this next chapter is going to go. It could be absolutely delightful
and incredible and amazing. It could also not end up being what you wanted it to be. Instead of
comforting yourself by leaving the door open, comfort yourself by looking around and seeing that
there are so many doors that you have yet to open.
And so if this chapter that you're about to go through now
doesn't end up working out,
there are thousands of directions to go next
that could be even better.
But you're in this place now
where this is the choice that you've made.
This is your immediate future,
find excitement about it.
Find all the things about it that you're excited about and try to focus on that as much as
you can as well.
I think what tends to cause overthinking and stress about say a new job or a new lifestyle
is, oh my God, I feel like I'm stuck in this new way of living.
If it doesn't work out, I'm stuck in it.
And that's why we tend to freak out, overthink,
and not be excited about new ventures
is because we're like, well, I'm stuck in it.
We're not stuck in anything.
I'm sorry, we're not.
There's always a way to change things, to pivot things.
So figure out, okay, what is my plan
if this next thing doesn't work out?
If this new career and lifestyle doesn't work out,
do I go back to the old career and lifestyle?
Or do I move on to this next idea for career and lifestyle?
I think it's nice to always have a plan
and that eases mind so much.
But also, again, as I said earlier,
also try to have a glass half full attitude
and see the positive in this new career and lifestyle. Try to find the things about it
that are exciting to you. Whether it's like, oh, this new area that I'm living in for this
new job, there's a lot of cute wine bars. So maybe I'll start going out to wine bars on the weekend
and meeting friends or I only work Monday through Thursday. So on Fridays, I have Fridays
off now. What am I going to do with that Friday? I could learn how to skateboard, like whatever.
I don't know who's learning how to skateboard, but you know what I'm saying. Try to find
the positives in the meantime while simultaneously creating a plan.
Somebody said, I'm scared if I go to college and follow the normal path, I'll always regret
not following my heart. What do you think? Well, it's never too late to follow your heart.
So if it's looking like you're going to go to college, even if that's something that
you're not feeling 100% confident in, if that's something that you've ultimately decided to do, regardless of feeling a little bit off about it, that
is ultimately the decision that you've made, right?
And that's okay, because even if that is the wrong decision, even if that's not what ends
up guiding you in the direction of your ultimate career path, it doesn't matter. There kind
of is no wrong choice. Like, I feel like we really fear making the wrong choice because we feel like if we make one wrong choice
That's the end of it. We've failed and there's no chance for pivoting
There's no chance for like we've ruined our chances. That is absolutely false
It's almost borderline superstitious and the feeling that we have that like if we don't make the right choice the first time that we've then demolished our chances for the rest of our lives,
there is something inherently superstitious and unhealthy about that. And that's something I'm
working on because I'm a very superstitious person and it's very toxic and unhealthy for me.
And something that I've noticed is that it's never too late. Okay, if for whatever reason,
even if you have a gut feeling that you maybe shouldn't go, okay? If for whatever reason, even if you have a gut feeling
that you maybe shouldn't go to college,
but for whatever reason you go anyway,
there was a reason, not to get spiritual,
but there was a reason why the universe
wanted you to go to college.
If that is where you end up,
that was where you were supposed to be.
And guess what?
Regardless of if that ultimately leads
to your ultimate career,
regardless of if that ends up being a good or bad experience,
regardless of everything.
You will, number one, learn from the experience,
and number two, not be knocked off your path far enough
that you can never get back on your path.
It just does not work that way.
You can graduate from college and then say,
okay, you know what, now I'm ready to follow my heart.
Now I'm confident enough to follow my heart.
I didn't follow my heart when I went to college.
I learned a lot from the experience,
but it wasn't right for me.
And I can't keep following this trajectory.
I need to pivot.
There's nothing wrong with doing that down the line.
There's this societal pressure to get it right the first time,
to do it all in a timely manner,
to do it all before you're 30. There's this pressure to do it all right the first time, to do it all in a timely manner, to do it all before you're 30. There's this
pressure to do it all right the first time and it's ridiculous and it's fucking stupid
because it holds us back. It's this limiting belief that we have as a society that we need
to get it right the first time that prevents us from making a choice that maybe didn't
quite work out and then pivoting down the line.
We convince ourselves that we've failed and we have to continue in this miserable lifestyle
that we started in because to pivot is to fail or to go to college when you're 30 is
to fail. To start a new job at 40 is to fail. No, it's not. It's fucking stupid. It is so stupid. It's so dumb. But it is this
weird societal pressure that we have. And I was so wrapped up in it. I was so wrapped up in it,
in middle school and high school. The obsession with following the perfect model of what a career
path should look like. Going to college, going to a particularly prestigious
college, going to the most competitive college
you can go to, and then getting the most competitive
job you possibly, that was the trajectory that I was on.
I was obsessed with that path.
And I was obsessed with doing it perfectly the first time
because that to me was what success was.
And I was all wrong about it.
But it made me so unhappy, it made me so miserable
living in that rigid mindset
of like, I need to get it right the first time.
And if I had just let myself go from that,
if I had just set myself free from that,
I mean, I would have been so much happier.
And I think that I would have been able
to make better choices so much easier.
So anyway, my overall advice is saying,
following your heart and not going to college, that's
beautiful.
That's what you should do.
Having a gut feeling that you don't really want to go to college, but going anyway, just
to make sure that you're not missing out on the college experience, that's beautiful and
delightful as well.
Both choices could be right.
Both choices could be wrong.
Regardless, you're gonna learn something
and regardless, they're both a part of your ultimate path.
The wrong turns in shit are a part of your path in life.
Don't fight it.
I really don't believe that there's a wrong choice.
And some people might disagree,
but I don't think that there is.
Somebody said, should I give up a steady government job
and take the risk to look for
what I'm truly passionate about? My recommendation here is if there's any possible way that you
could potentially look for what you're truly passionate about while working in your steady
job, that would be my recommendation. Like if you can do research, read books, watch documentaries,
research other career paths while simultaneously working in your steady job, that is what I
would recommend. Like if you can do your soul searching while you have a steady income,
that would be my personal recommendation just because then you get the best of both worlds,
right? I think it can be really frightening to leave something before you have a plan.
And I'm not saying like, sometimes we have a gut feeling about that.
Like I think I should leave.
I think that I should start on this other venture.
I don't really have it fully fleshed out yet, but I feel like in my gut, I'm being told
to leave my job and do this.
Fair enough.
I will never bash somebody's intuition
if they feel something in their soul.
But if you don't have a plan yet,
and you don't even really know what your passion is yet,
I would say do research and formulate a stronger opinion
about what you wanna do next before you leave.
Because I think that you can do both at once.
I think that you can continue working in once. I think that you can continue
working in your government job and start soul searching simultaneously. So that's what I
would recommend.
And last but not least, somebody said, should I go for jobs that pay or jobs I love? I think
it really comes down to your priorities. What is most important to you? Figure out what that is,
and then allow that to answer your question, right?
How much do you care about money?
Because there's nothing wrong with being like,
I wanna make a lot of money,
I wanna live really comfortably.
Like, that was a goal that I had when I was younger,
because I didn't grow up with a lot of money,
and a lot of my friends had a lot of money.
And I was like, fuck, that seems delightful. I would love to with a lot of money and a lot of my friends had a lot of money. And I was like, fuck, that seems delightful.
I would love to have a lot of money.
And I was really determined to make a comfortable amount of money and not worry about money
anymore.
That was something that was a huge priority for me when I was younger, younger, younger.
Then I got older and realized, I don't care as much anymore. My priorities have shifted as I've grown older,
and it's interesting because now I'm like, I've experienced that. And now I'm like, you know,
it's not as fulfilling as I maybe thought it would be, right? And, you know, when I was a kid,
I was willing to work a job that maybe wasn't my passion in order to reach my financial goals.
That was where my head was at as a kid.
But anyway, all of that to say,
you need to figure out what's most important to you.
Again, I'll bring it back to my parents.
Like, I think that my mom is more interested
in having a job that pays well.
Historically, for as long as I've been alive,
she's prioritized jobs that make
money over jobs that she loves because she wants to live as comfortably as possible so
that her time when she's not working can look a certain way. Whereas my dad has always been
more concerned about jobs that he enjoys and jobs that allow him to have a lot of free time. So he's preferred
to choose jobs that he loves over jobs that pay well. So again, I've seen both sides of
the aisle and then me growing up as a kid, I was more concerned about eventually getting
a job that paid well. I was less concerned about it being my passion, which is funny
because now, you know, I've talked a lot about how I've realized now that I don't think that that's
where I stand on it personally anymore.
Like if I were to go back in time and this job that I have now was not my job, I think
that I would have ultimately come to the conclusion eventually that I'd rather have a job that
I love than a job that pays.
If everything were to be erased, my job now, if I were to keep the brain that I have now,
but my career and the money that I've made be all wiped away and I were to have a fresh
slate, I can say with full confidence that I would choose a job I love over a job that
paid because I now realize that I need far less than I thought that I did to feel comfortable
and happy. I don't need as much than I thought that I did to feel comfortable and happy. I don't
need as much as I thought I did. There are things that I've spent money on, like whether
it's my house or maybe nice clothes sometimes or eating at nice restaurants sometimes. There
are things that I definitely spend a lot of money, even like, you know, staying at maybe nicer hotels than I definitely ever stayed at when I was a kid. There are
certain things that I do definitely spend money on now that I thought would benefit
my life in some way, like, you know, like being able to buy nice clothes, being able
to eat expensive food, you know, being able to enjoy these things maybe more frequently
than I did as a kid. I think I expected these things to bring more joy than they did. And that is not to say I'm not grateful for these
things, but I've just learned that I don't need these things. I don't need a house that's
the size of the house that I have now. I would be equally as happy living in the size of
house that I grew up in. Two bedroom, actually in my mom's apartment growing up, one bedroom.
Well the first apartment we lived in, one bedroom, one bathroom. I live alone. I don't
need all this space. As long as I have art in my house that I like and I have furniture
that I think is cute, it doesn't need to be expensive furniture, just stuff I enjoy. I
don't need to do that. Traveling, growing up I stayed in motels with my dad when we'd be
like, you know, going on a family vacation, like meeting up with our family on the East
Coast and our family, our extended family, maybe rented like a large sort of cabin for
everybody to stay in. But my dad and I, on the way to said cabin, would maybe have to
stay a night in a really kind of scary, gross motel, okay?
Listen, I don't love that.
I would avoid doing that again.
But what I'm saying is like, we still had fucking fun.
We still had fun.
It was equally as fun.
I travel with my dad still and we always had fun.
The level of fun that we've had has not changed
from staying at motels to staying at nice hotels.
Nothing has changed about the experience. It's not any more fun. It's maybe more comfortable.
It maybe feels safer and those things are definitely not to be ignored. But when it
comes to fulfillment and joy, I've realized that money only helps so much, right? Like money, and I've talked about this a lot,
and it's somewhat controversial,
and so I'm sorry to poke the bear,
but like money to a certain extent can buy happiness,
absolutely undeniably,
because money can buy safety,
money can buy comfort,
money can buy, you know, at times quality, right?
Like it is undeniable that to a certain extent,
money buys happiness.
I will never, if I ever say money doesn't buy happiness,
it's because just know that there's nuance there
and the nuance is that money does buy happiness.
Undeniably, I will never ever,
like for the remainder of my life,
I will never deny or fight.
Money does buy happiness to a point, absolutely.
But beyond that point, it does not.
And that is what I've realized from my experiences in life.
And so with that being said,
if everything were to be erased and I had to start over,
I can be happy and fulfilled off of far less
than I ever thought.
And with that knowledge and with that understanding
of myself now, I would choose a job that I love.
But again, all of this soul searching, all of this,
sometimes you have to go and get a job that pays
to realize, you know what, I actually don't care
about money as much as I thought I did.
I need to have a certain amount of money to survive
and be comfortable and that is absolutely priority for me.
But I don't need to have a certain amount of money to survive and be comfortable. And that is absolutely priority for me. But I don't need to have excess necessarily.
I can go and maybe live a bit more frugally with a job that I love.
And it doesn't even really make a difference.
It just only makes my life better.
But again, you have to go on that journey yourself.
You have to figure out what is going to make you feel the most fulfilled.
And that is key. Okay?
And it might mean like making more money than you need to then realize, okay, I don't actually
need to live that way. I don't want to live that way. It might also be going and getting
a job you love and being like, I'm so, I'm still like, I want a bit more financial freedom.
This is not comfortable for me. Right? In that case, okay, now you know what?
I'm gonna sacrifice working this job I love
to build a bit more financial freedom.
And it's a journey that there are gonna be wrong turns,
there are gonna be right turns.
And it's a question that takes a while to answer, I think.
But that's it.
That's all I have for today.
Thank you all for listening and hanging out.
I love you all and appreciate you all. And it's always such a joy just like chatting, like just chatting with you. New
episodes every Thursday and Sunday. Stream anywhere you get podcasts, although video
episodes are exclusively on Spotify. Check out Anything Goes on social media at Anything
Goes. Check me out at Emma Chamberlain. Check out my coffee company, ChamberlainCoffee.com
or at Chamberlain Coffee on social media.
And I'll be talking to you all very soon.
Thank you all for hanging out.
I love you all.
I appreciate you all.
And you're so awesome.
Okay, talk to you soon.
Bye.