
In all honesty, how many of you were burned out to the point of considering abandoning your education and training just to start over?
Music is not your passion? Don't you play and teach music for a living? I mean, I know the lederhosen are probably a big part of why you do it, but...Stewmuse wrote:That said, over the past 20 years, I've been leaning more toward the idea that you should NOT make your passion/love into your career, but keep it as something you merely do as an avocation. Huh? Because when it is what you do on a daily, full(ish) time basis, it WILL become more of a chore - fulfilling other peoples' requests, doing dozens of tasks in which you have little or no interest, or even just finding out all sorts of crap you never knew about because someone else was doing it for you - rather than something to which you look forward. A lot of the "mental escape" your passion was providing will no longer exist.
Ah... you make, unsurprisingly, the mistake most people do about music. You are assuming that we always enjoy what we're doing because, hey, it's music. Very little of what we get to asked to perform actually appeals to very many of us anything more than a rudimentary "I'm performing" level. There are exceptions, of course, but those of us who are not headliners who get to call our own shots are the majority. And you don't get to see the happenings when we're not performing, the things we have to do on a daily basis to keep ourselves physically and mentally prepared to perform at the high levels expected. It's not unlike athletes who "get paid a million dollars week to just play on Sunday afternoon." The actual performance is just the result of all the other efforts. These other efforts are rarely... euphoric.Kip wrote:Music is not your passion? Don't you play and teach music for a living? I mean, I know the lederhosen are probably a big part of why you do it, but...Stewmuse wrote:That said, over the past 20 years, I've been leaning more toward the idea that you should NOT make your passion/love into your career, but keep it as something you merely do as an avocation. Huh? Because when it is what you do on a daily, full(ish) time basis, it WILL become more of a chore - fulfilling other peoples' requests, doing dozens of tasks in which you have little or no interest, or even just finding out all sorts of crap you never knew about because someone else was doing it for you - rather than something to which you look forward. A lot of the "mental escape" your passion was providing will no longer exist.
Nope. I didn't make that assumption at all. It could have been any field. My assertion was that 1.) you enjoy music, & would consider it a passion of yours, and 2.) you have chosen to follow that field, from all appearances, happily. Unless you're suffering the same burnout as Craig, you've followed a passion into a career that (overall) you enjoy. I totally agree that a passion followed into a career can be a disaster. Just ask 99 of 100 professional fishermen. Most of them hate fishing.Stewmuse wrote:Ah... you make, unsurprisingly, the mistake most people do about music. You are assuming that we always enjoy what we're doing because, hey, it's music.
Unless cigar smokers get our crap together, this will be a moot point long before you'll reach a retirement age....IWinchester wrote:The struggle I'm having now is whether I push forward with going into the cigar business on the retail side. The last thing I want is my love of the leaf to diminish...
Yes, as to why slecting music. We are, if not on the same page, certainly reading the same chapter...Kip wrote:Nope. I didn't make that assumption at all. It could have been any field. My assertion was that 1.) you enjoy music, & would consider it a passion of yours, and 2.) you have chosen to follow that field, from all appearances, happily. Unless you're suffering the same burnout as Craig, you've followed a passion into a career that (overall) you enjoy. I totally agree that a passion followed into a career can be a disaster. Just ask 99 of 100 professional fishermen. Most of them hate fishing.Stewmuse wrote:Ah... you make, unsurprisingly, the mistake most people do about music. You are assuming that we always enjoy what we're doing because, hey, it's music.
If your true preference was for the menial, shortlived work why did you change? Simple economics? I suspect that doing something that you have a correlating interest in makes you happier in the long run - even though some aspects can be dreary or tiresome. It's a worthwhile trade-off to do something you love.
That's all I meant in my original, rambling post. If a person can't find a reasonable amount of satisfaction in his work, it will be hard to find fulfillment in it overall.
That said, I absolutely deny any belief that our whole personhood or "fulfillment" should come from our work, though. That's the trouble with guys; we tend to place far, far too much importance on what we do with the time we spend earning a living. Somewhere, there's a happy medium where we do work that gives us a sense of accomplishment and value, then go home and get the real deal. I just think that given the option to continue with drudging through the minefield of something we detest and making a move to something that is both enjoyable and fruitful, I go with fruitful every time. That's the gravy.
That happy medium is very elusive, however....