Have You Discovered Your Passion?
May 25 2009

Everyone has heard the word passion.  It’s written about in business books, in fiction books, in poems, in romance novels, etc..  It’s shown on TV and in the movies when people find their true loves or their calling in life.  But what is it?  In the world of entrepreneurship, people tell you in order to be successful you must be passionate about what you are doing.  I’ve run into a lot of people who appear passionate about what they are doing but they don’t always succeed in the way they expected.  Passion ebbs and flows in most everything in life.  Sometimes you are in love with your business and sometimes you aren’t, but in order to survive like Microsoft, Dell, Apple, etc. the passion must be there, the underlying love for your products, people, and company must be there and the gaps between must not be long.

They say true passion can be traced back to childhood, when everything seemed possible.  My son is passionate about soccer and hanging out with his good buddies.  If it was up to him, he’d be kicking around a soccer ball all day long.  I often have to tell him not to kick the soccer ball in the main part of the house.   If we’d let him, he’d probably sleep with his soccer ball.  If you mention one of his friend’s names, he will incessantly ask us when we are going to see him next.  He’s a bit of a socialite like his mom.

I can’t tell what my daughter is passionate about yet, but I think she has an affinity for music and lip gloss.  We have a keyboard in our house that my father gave us and she tends to gravitate to it and punch the keys from time to time.  And she likes to play the bowling game on the Wii.

My husband is passionate about starting the multi-lingual, international Magellan School here in Austin.  He is passionate about his kids learning Spanish since he is fluent in Spanish and wants them to have the gift of multiple languages that was given to him.  He is also passionate about biking and exercising.  He set a goal to do the Shiner Bash – 100 mile ride and he did it.  He exercises every day and he says he’s in the best shape he’s ever been in his life.

What a blessing it must be to discover your passion and find yourself being able to realize your goals.  It’s even better when you can make a living at it.  It seems like most people can’t turn their passion into making a living for whatever reasons whether it be timing, market acceptance, encouragement, money, health, ability, skills, etc.  Many people try to keep their passion alive on the side or after some time, we forget what it was we were passionate about.

Right now in my life, I’m most passionate about my kids.  I am passionate about helping people achieve more than they thought they could.   When I look back upon my childhood, I remember the passion I had for music.  I think my father actually started taking us to piano lessons when I was about 9 years old when we lived in Albuquerque, NM.  When we moved to Lubbock, TX , I sought out my own piano teacher who lived nearby and I would walk to her house for lessons.  It was hard to find time to practice and hard to find time to continue since it was just me, my mom, and my sister.  My grandmother studied piano in Oxford University in England so I must get some of my passion for music from her.  Sadly, I can’t play the piano today, but I can sing.

I sang in church and actually did a solo in front of the entire church in my early teens.  I sang in high school choir.  I sought out my own voice teacher and when I went to college at UT Austin, I took voice courses for two semesters.  I knew I was reasonably good, but not great.   I never envisioned myself singing in a musical or singing opera so I guess I thought what’s the point and continued on with my business degree.  In grad school I sang a few songs in a couple of bands.

I also remembered that I liked to write.  In my early teens, a few girlfriends and I would start this notebook with a story and each of us would have to write the next part until we ended up with a full story.  I hate to admit this, but I think Michael Jackson and his glove showed up a time or two in those stories. 🙂  I wonder what happened to those notebooks.  I would also invariably get high grades in creativity in my English classes but very low grades in grammar.  The concept of grammar didn’t click for me until my freshman English class in college for some reason.

I also didn’t have anyone around me encouraging me, connecting me with people, giving me feedback, or showing me the way to nurture those creative right brain activities I was drawn to.  So I did what any respectable child of two doctors would do….I got an Accounting degree and then an MBA, which has served me well and odds are has resulted in a much more lucrative career than if I had pursued writing, singing or horse back riding (another younger days hobby of mine) as a career.

So now here I am in mid-life.  Too old to start up regular horse back riding again for fear of breaking my bones…well not really, but not enough time to go to a barn and take care of a horse.  It’s highly unlikely that I can make singing a financially rewarding career at this point in my life, but I am enjoying my voice lessons and relish any time I can make it to a jam session.  I do enjoy writing in my blog.

So that leaves me to figure out how best to blend my passion for working with people, with a product I’m passionate about, with a path to millions of dollars….

Any suggestions?  How did you discover your passion?

Author: | Filed under: entrepreneur, entrepreneurship, parenting | Tags: | 4 Comments »

4 Comments on “Have You Discovered Your Passion?”

  1. 1 Erin Defosse said at 3:29 PM on May 28th, 2009:

    The passion I have for the school was born out of two things: seeing my children and me wanting them to have the best of everything in the world and me trying to reconnect with a deeply powerful part of my life – my own childhood experience at school. I have dreams about my elementary, middle, and high school all the time. Now I get to channel that into the school and feel empowered by it. It is a really remarkable experience. What keeps me going is not only my internal passion but the passion I see in others when they get “hooked into” the school as well. We are all somehow trying to reconnect with the child inside us and I think this is a way for me to do it. As for my exercising and bike riding, those aren’t passions in the same way as the school is. But that is another different and very long story. 🙂

    Erin Defosses last blog post..Magellan International School to Open August 2009

  2. 2 Aruni said at 7:57 PM on May 29th, 2009:

    @Erin – I’m so glad you’ve found your passion. The post was really about me and my search for passion and as you say reconnecting with the child inside. Sometimes others need someone to believe in and support them no matter what.

  3. 3 thom singer said at 11:42 AM on May 30th, 2009:

    I had a passion as a kid for writing… but it was not one of those things that anyone supported. The “starving artist” thing did not appeal to my parents.

    My 8th grade English teacher (Mrs. Nicholidas) harshly chastised me after I failed a grammar test. She told me I had no business in the advanced English class, and I could never be a writer (she was a young teaching in 1980 and probably thought she was giving “tough love”… instead she left me hating writing for decades). Now I have written books.

    Turns out you can do what ever you want. Grammar issues? get an editor!

    I think you will find what you are looking for… just by looking your passion you get a better chance at finding it!!

  4. 4 Aruni said at 6:42 PM on May 31st, 2009:

    @thom – I can relate to the not being supported…mostly because of life situation at the time. It’s funny how people put parameters around who will be successful because they do things a certain way. I remember teachers trying to get me to change the way I hold a pencil which is not the normal way. Now my son does the same thing and I tell him ‘that’s just fine…you can write that way and still be just fine!’ 🙂