Hardcore Career Advice for a 13 Year Old
I'm ashamed because I felt the need to brag to my 13 year old. But she asked for it.
My daughter Mollie had a homework assignment where she had to ask me what I do for a living which put me in a weird position. I do a lot of things. I didn't know how to tell her.
But it also shows that school is too focused on: EDUCATION leads to A JOB.
This is not true anymore.
The reality is:
- The average person has 14 different careers in their lives.
- The average multi-millionaire has seven different sources of income.
So anything that is "one job focused" will create a generation of kids that will learn the hard way that life doesn't work like that.
The world changes fast. The jobs I do now didn't exist when I was 13. And the jobs she will do don't exist now.
So learning how to learn is more important than memorizing facts.
Here are her questions:
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Hey dad! could you answer some questions about your career for my guidance class? It is a homework assignment.
- What is the name of your occupation? What are the educational requirements to work in your career?
- What do you like in your work? What do you dislike?
- How is your day typically spent? What are your work hours?
- How did you chose your occupation?
- What advice would you suggest to young people regarding career choices?
Thank you! Love you
– – –
Hi Mollie!
QUESTION #1: What is the name of your occupation? What are the educational requirements to work in your career?
ANSWER: I don't have a single occupation. AND you can drop out of school right now and do what I do!
In fact, Mollie, I hope you drop out of school right now. Please?
I'm a firm believer that people feel more well-being in their life when they are around people they love, they are good at what they do, and they have some autonomy (freedom) in how they make decisions.
You get more freedom in your life by doing many different things.
Some of which make money, some don't, but all increase your COMPETENCE, RELATIONSHIPS and FREEDOM.
The three musketeers of well-being.
So I am a writer (I write books and articles). I'm a podcaster (I've had 10 million downloads of my podcast). I speak occasionally. And I advise or invest in over 30 different companies.
And I screw up a lot. If you do a lot of things, you screw up a lot of things. You have to give yourself permission to totally humiliate yourself repeatedly. If you can do that, then happiness results.
With companies I advise I try to stick to one criteria: can this company help over a billion people?
[note: I think I exaggerated on that answer. Pathetically bragging to a 13 year old. Maybe a million people is more accurate. Or, heck, a hundred people].
And remember, there are ZERO formal education requirements for what I do.
QUESTION #2: What do you like in your work? What do you dislike?
ANSWER: I am really happy with the friends I've made in the past five years. Also, I learn a lot. Probably a day has not gone by where I haven't learned a huge amount.
The thing I dislike is that sometimes I don't say "NO" enough (even though I wrote the book, "The Power of No").
Here is the secret!
If something is not a "hell, YES!" then you should say "no".
But even though this is a good technique, it is sometimes hard to follow and you end up saying "yes" because you want people to like you and you end up having less times to do the things that make you creative and give you life and energy.
I don't know how to solve that. Practice.
QUESTION #3: How is your day typically spent? What are your work hours?
ANSWER: I have no work hours. Neither will you. You have school hours now but those are fake work hours.
BUT.
Daily routine is very important. We are at different levels of energy and productivity throughout the day.
For instance, at an extreme example, late at night we tend to be tired (that is why we sleep).
So if you try to do important work at night, it might not come out good.
We are at our peak productivity in our brain from 2 to 4 hours after we are awake.
So if we wake up at 5am, then from 7am to 9am your brain is about 100 times more active than it is at night.
So I wake up at 5am. I read for two hours. Then I write for two hours because this is the activity that is most important to me.
Then I walk or exercise. Then start to do things that require less and less brain power. Like advising businesses (I will do that first) and then do things like running errands or things that don't require as much energy.
Our brain is only 2% of our body mass but burns 25% of our calories every day!
So how you make use of this magnificent tool that we have is very important for how well your day turns out.
QUESTION #4: How did you chose your occupation?
ANSWER: I don't have an occupation.
But then I got desperate and scared.
I started building businesses when I was in my 20s because I needed to make some money.
When your sister was born it was like this new US citizen moved into my house and she was one foot tall, didn't speak English, couldn't walk, shat all over the floor, and cried all the time, and I had to take care of her.
So I felt I needed to make money to do that.
Sometimes I was good at it and sometimes I was incredibly stressed out and bad at it. Sometimes I wanted to run away.
But I'm glad I didn't. Because now both that little one foot person and you are now in my life.
I've built over 20 businesses and maybe 17 of them have failed and three have done well.
But I've also loved writing and creating since I was a little kid. I've written every single day for almost the past 25 years.
Because I know a lot of people and write about a lot of people I've also started doing a "radio show" (podcast) where I interview people. I've interviewed entrepreneurs (Mark Cuban, Arianna Huffington), entertainers (Coolio, Amanda Palmer), many authors, many athletes, and all people who have tried to make their lives better.
I interview them because I want to learn from them and share their stories with my listeners. I try to be a good interviewer but it's hard. I try to practice.
For every ten people that like you, at least one or two people HATE you and they are the ones who reach out and contact you.
So the better you do, the more you hear from people who hate you. So you have to give yourself permission to do things that a lot of people hate.
And I like helping businesses because often we are solving problems very important to many people.
I chose to do these things because I love them and I also love the impact they have on people. It was very hard for me to figure out all the things I want to do and it often changes.
When you have impact on people, money is a byproduct. You get better and better at how to make that byproduct when you mine for value.
Every six months from now I end up doing different things. I have no idea what I will be doing for a living six months from now. Nobody does.
Nothing in life is predictable. You can say, "I will do X" but then in a year you will end up doing "Y" and that's fine.
Being unpredictable is more normal than being predictable. Humans were made to be nomads, to be in different environments, to roam the world, and we evolved to adapt quickly to new experiences.
So what new experiences we all adapt to six months from now is unknown. But I hope and think I will still love what I do and still help people and still be creative in everything I do.
QUESTION #5: What advice would you suggest to young people regarding career choices?
ANSWER: Whenever you are curious, ask questions.
If you feel a question is "stupid" then DEFINITELY ask that question. If you are shy about asking a question, then ask TWO questions.
Claudia has a good trick for this. Whenever she is at a conference and it's question time, she raises her hand fast before she even knows what question she wants to ask.
Then she has to figure out a question to ask.
Otherwise you stay in a tight line with everyone else. You have to step out of the line to see how the entire formation works.
Curiosity will fuel this giant engine we call our brain. It will help you learn things that nobody else knows.
It will help you figure out what you want to do and be and what problems you want to solve faster than all the people who are too afraid to ask questions.
The next thing is: always be healthy. You can't be creative if you are sick. Every seven years your body is made up of 100% new cells and the old cells die.
Where do the cells come from? Mostly from the food you eat. Eat junk and you are junk. Eat well and you are well.
Also remember this saying: "you are the average of the five people you surround yourself with". If you surround yourself with good, creative, smart people then you will be a good, creative, smart person.
These are like your "emotional cells". They change 100% every six months.
Every day remember to be creative, even a little bit. Write, or read, or draw, or write down ten ideas.
This builds your "creative cells".
Note that my biology skills are off the chain.
Finally, remember that every day is the only day we have to work with. Regrets are already dead in the past. And worries about the future are unpredictable.
So be grateful for the many blessings you have right now. You have a blessed life with an entire world that is your drawing board.
Paint a beautiful picture on it.
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Read more from the author... James Altucher is an entrepreneur, investor and best-selling author of the book "Choose Yourself Guide to Wealth". He openly discusses the financial and emotional impact of making (and losing) money in his personal blog which you can find by clicking here.
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9 年Great post James. Before your daughter Mollie makes any decision about her first career pathway, she needs to learn about who is she. When she is aware of what she values and believes in, there will be no stopping her identifying the work she wants complete along her career life journey.
Business Executive
9 年Refreshing and authentic.
A Man On A Mission
9 年Love your work James!! Keep being "You".
Quality Leader at Tenneco
9 年Hi James, I always appreciate your posts. Back in 1994, Prof Charles handy wrote a ground-breaking, thought-provoking book titled, "The Age of Unreason". I was one of the few that came across it by chance, read it and realised my life had somehow followed his advice for the future. Amognst many prophetic and noteworthy comments was his take on careers. "In the future we will not have careers but have a portfolio of skills that we can offer to the highest bidder", or something along those lines (it was 21 years ago). Your article basically suggests the same. He also said that organisations will swivel into inverted pyramids where the few would work for the majority. Interestingly, the exception to the non-career path was if one was in a specialist function like Legal, Medical, Engineering, etc where it is prudent to remain in the game by being the best in one's field, always striving to increase knowledge and expertise. Anyway, worth a read even in today's work arena.
Just forwarded this article to my 16 year old daughter , thank you for writing and share with us