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Why some of us don't have one true calling | Emilie Wapnick | TEDxBend

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    Raise your hand
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    if you have ever been asked
    the question,
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    "What do you want to be
    when you grow up?"
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    (Laughter)
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    Now, if you had to guess,
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    how old would you say you were
    when you were first asked this question?
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    You can just hold up fingers.
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    Three, five, three, five, five; OK.
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    Now, raise your hand if the question
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    "What do you want to be when you grow up?"
    has ever caused you any anxiety.
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    (Laughter)
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    Any anxiety at all.
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    I'm someone who's never been able
    to answer the question,
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    "What do you want to be
    when you grow up?"
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    See, the problem wasn't
    that I didn't have any interests
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    it's that I had too many.
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    In high school I liked English,
    and Math, and Arts, and I built websites,
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    and I played guitar in a punk band
    called Frustrated Telephone Operator.
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    (Laughter)
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    Maybe you've heard of us.
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    (Laughter)
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    This continued after high school,
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    and at a certain point,
    I began to notice this pattern in myself,
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    where I would become interested in an area
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    and I would dive in,
    and become all consumed,
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    and I'd get to be pretty good
    at whatever it was,
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    and then I would hit this point
    where I'd start to get bored.
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    And usually, I would try
    and persist anyway
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    because I'd already devoted
    so much time and energy,
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    and sometimes money into this field.
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    But eventually, this sense of boredom,
    this feeling of, "Yeah, I've got this!
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    This isn't challenging anymore,"
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    it would get to be too much,
    and I would have to let it go.
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    But then, I would become
    interested in something else,
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    something totally unrelated,
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    and I would dive into that
    and become all consumed,
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    and I would feel like,
    "Yes, I found my thing!"
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    And then I would hit this point again
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    where I'd start to get bored
    and eventually I would let it go.
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    But then I would discover
    something new and totally different,
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    and I would dive into that...
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    This pattern caused me
    a lot of anxiety for two reasons:
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    the first was that I wasn't sure
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    how I was going to turn
    any of this into a career.
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    I thought that I would eventually
    have to pick one thing,
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    deny all my other passions
    and just resign myself to being bored.
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    The other reason
    it caused me so much anxiety
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    was a little bit more personal.
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    I worried that there was
    something wrong with this
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    and something wrong with me
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    for being unable to stick with anything.
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    I worried that I was afraid of commitment,
    or that I was scattered,
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    or that I was self sabotaging,
    afraid of my own success.
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    If you can relate to my story
    and to these feelings,
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    I'd like you to ask yourself a question
    that I wish I had asked myself back then.
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    Ask yourself where you learned
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    to assign the meaning of wrong
    or abnormal to doing many things.
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    I'll tell you where you learnt it.
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    You learnt it from the culture.
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    When you were first asked the question,
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    "What do you want to be when you grow up?"
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    you were about five years old,
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    and the truth is that no one really cares
    what you say when you are that age.
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    (Laughter)
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    It's considered an innocuous question
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    posed to little kids
    to elicit cute replies.
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    Like, "I want to be an astronaut,"
    or "I want to be a ballerina,"
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    or "I want to be a pirate,"
    - insert Halloween costume here.
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    (Laughter)
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    But this question is asked of us
    again and again
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    as we get older in various forms.
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    For instance,
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    high school students might get asked
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    what major they are going to pick
    in college.
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    And at some point,
    what do you want to be when you grow up
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    goes from being
    the cute exercise it once was
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    to the thing that keeps us up at night.
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    Why?
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    See, while this question inspires kids
    to dream about what they could be,
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    it does not inspire them to dream
    about all that they could be.
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    In fact, it does just the opposite.
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    Because when someone asks you
    what you want to be,
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    you can't reply with 20 different things.
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    The well meaning adult
    will likely chuckle and be like,
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    "Oh, how cute, but you can't be
    a violin maker and a psychologist.
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    You have to choose."
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    This is Doctor Bob Childs.
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    (Laughter)
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    And he's a luthier and a psychotherapist.
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    And this is Amy Ng, a magazine editor,
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    turned illustrator, entrepreneur,
    teacher, and creative director.
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    But most kids don't hear
    about people like this.
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    All they hear is
    that they are going to have to choose.
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    But it's more than that.
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    The notion of the narrowly focused life
    is highly romanticized in our culture.
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    It's this idea of destiny
    or the one true calling.
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    The idea that we each have one great thing
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    we are meant to do
    during our time on this Earth.
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    And you need to figure out
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    what that thing is
    and devote your life to it.
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    But, what if you are someone
    who isn't wired this way?
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    What if there are a lot
    of different subjects
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    that you're curious about?
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    And many different things you want to do?
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    Well, there is no room
    for someone like you in this framework.
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    And so you might feel alone.
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    You might feel like
    you don't have a purpose.
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    You might feel like
    there is something wrong with you.
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    There is nothing wrong with you.
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    What you are is a multipotentialite.
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    (Applause)
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    A multipotentialite is someone
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    with many interests and creative pursuits.
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    It's a mouthful to say.
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    It might help if you break it up
    into three parts:
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    multi - potential - ite.
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    You can also use one of the other terms
    that connote the same ideas,
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    such is the polymath,
    the Renaissance person.
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    Actually, during the Renaissance period
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    it was considered the ideal
    to be well versed in multiple disciplines.
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    Barbara Sher refers to us as scanners.
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    Use whichever term you like
    or invent your own.
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    I have to say I find it sort of fitting
    that as a community,
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    we cannot agree on a single identity.
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    (Laughter)
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    It's easy to see you multipotentiality
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    as a limitation or an affliction
    that you need to overcome.
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    But what I've learned
    through speaking with people
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    and writing about these ideas
    on my website, Puttylike,
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    is that there is some tremendous
    strengths to being this way.
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    Here are 3 multipotentialite super powers.
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    One; idea synthesis.
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    That is combining two or more fields
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    and creating something new
    at the intersection.
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    Sha Hwang and Rachel Binx
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    drew from their shared interest
    in cartography,
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    data visualization, travel, mathematics,
    and design when they founded Meshu.
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    Meshu is a company that creates
    custom geographically inspired jewelry.
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    Sha and Rachel came up
    with this unique idea
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    not despite, but because
    of their eclectic mix
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    of skills and experiences.
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    Innovation happens at the intersections.
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    That's where the new ideas come from.
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    And multipotentialites
    with all of their backgrounds
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    are able to access
    a lot of these points of intersection.
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    The second multipotentialite
    superpower is rapid learning.
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    When multipotentialites become
    interested in something - we go hard.
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    We absorb everything
    we can get our hands on.
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    We're also used to being beginners
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    because we've been beginners
    so many times in the past.
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    And this means that we're less afraid
    of trying new things
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    and stepping out of our comfort zones.
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    What's more, many skills
    are transferable across disciplines.
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    And we bring everything we've learned
    to every new area we pursue
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    so we're rarely starting from scratch.
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    Nora Dunn is a full time traveler
    and freelance writer.
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    As a child concert pianist,
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    she honed an incredible ability
    to develop muscle memory.
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    Now she's the fastest typist she knows.
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    Before becoming a writer,
    Nora was a financial planner.
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    She had to learn
    the finer mechanics of sales
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    when she was starting her practice,
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    and this skill now helps her write
    compelling pitches to editors.
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    It is rarely a waste of time
    to pursue something you are drawn to,
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    even if you end up quitting.
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    You might apply that knowledge
    in a different field entirely
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    in a way you couldn't have anticipated.
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    The third multipotentialite
    super power is adaptability.
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    That is the ability to morph
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    into whatever you need to be
    in a given situation.
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    Abe Cajudo is sometimes a video director,
    sometimes a web designer,
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    sometimes a Kickstarter consultant,
    sometimes a teacher,
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    and sometimes, apparently, James Bond.
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    (Laughter)
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    He's valuable because he does good work.
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    He's even more valuable
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    because he can take on various roles
    depending on his client's needs.
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    Fast Company Magazine
    identified adaptability
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    as the single most
    important skill to develop
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    in order to thrive in the 21st century.
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    The economic world is changing
    so quickly and unpredictably
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    that it is the individuals
    and organizations that can pivot
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    in order to meet the needs of the market
    that are really going to thrive.
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    Idea synthesis, rapid learning
    and adaptability.
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    Three skills that multipotentialites
    are very adept at.
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    And three skills that they might lose
    if pressured to narrow their focus.
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    As a society, we have a vested interest
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    in encouraging multipotentialites
    to be themselves.
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    We have a lot of complex, multidimensional
    problems in the world right now,
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    and we need creative,
    out-of-the-box thinkers to tackle them.
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    Now, let's say that you are
    in your heart a specialist.
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    You came out of the womb
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    knowing you wanted to be
    a pediatric neurosurgeon.
  • 11:05 - 11:08
    Don't worry, there's nothing wrong
    with you either.
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    (Laughter)
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    In fact, some of the best teams
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    are comprised of a specialist
    and a multipotentialite paired together.
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    A specialist can dive-in deep
    and implement ideas
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    while the multipotentialite brings
    a breadth of knowledge to the project.
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    It's a beautiful partnership.
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    But we should all be designing
    lives and careers
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    that are aligned with how we are wired,
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    and sadly, multipotentialites
    are largely being encouraged
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    simply to be
    more like their specialist peers.
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    So, with that said;
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    if there's one thing
    you take away from this talk,
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    I hope that it is this:
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    embrace your inner wiring
    whatever that may be.
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    If you are a specialist at heart,
    then by all means, specialize.
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    That is where you'll do your best work.
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    But, to the multipotentialites in the room
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    - including those of you
    who may have just realized
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    in the last 12 minutes that you are one -
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    (Laughter)
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    to you I say: embrace your many passions,
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    follow your curiosity
    down those rabbit holes,
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    explore your intersections.
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    Embracing our inner wiring
    leads to a happier, more authentic life
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    and perhaps more importantly,
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    multipotentialites,
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    the world needs us.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Why some of us don't have one true calling | Emilie Wapnick | TEDxBend
Description:

This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at http://ted.com/tedx

Have too many passions to settle on just one? Perfect. Your unique mix of interests may turn out to be your very own super power.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
12:53

English subtitles

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