I gave a talk on ‘Aspiration and Ambition’ to a small bunch of people at
work this day. The topic and thought came from talking to one of the brightest
minds I have known :) What I touched upon during the talk, is in the below
transcript.
I have this special talent in utilizing only the 11th hour. My
mom discovered this talent right from my school days – the talent of the 'last
minute rush'. As usual, in the 11th hour, the past night of the scheduled talk, I glanced at the email
invite and noticed that this is to be an interactive session. My eyes locked upon
“Interactive”, and as is an IT person’s reflex I google “Interactive”. Google
never disappoints. “Being Interactive” is to influence each other and, it is not
necessarily a Q&A as is widely misunderstood. Thus I confidently declared my
hope to be influenced by the open thoughts the energetic audience may have to
share on the topic. And to do that, I requested them to let go of any air that they
feel is around them, could be from the weight of the tag that we wear around our
neck or from the chill of the comfortable room we are in. To be honest, not to
sleep but, think and be ready to most sincerely introspect.
Let me narrate a very simple cycle of events in the context of our (Indian)
academic system. A group of children rollicking in their early teens are
systematically exposed to “the” most important phase of their education and life
- the 10th grade! We manage. A year goes by and what do we have
again – “the real” most important turning point in your education pops
up, Pre-University or Plus-Two! Here you are mostly given four options based
on tolerance levels - Bio OR, Math OR, both OR, Commerce. It is mostly the
question of Engineering or Medicine. Let us take the more common graduation among the audience here - Engineering. 4 years pass – to reveal yet another “deciding point” of
our education and future – secure a job or go for higher studies! Most of the
batch end up in some company or as teaching assistants in institutes. Are you
able to relate to any of this or all of this? Here we are, all of us, in this esteemed IT company. Now what? We “live happily ever after”, is it? While in college our
life was semester to semester, now we live project to project. The topic of
today - "Aspirations and Ambitions" would have left you wondering
whether I know any English. A bit and yes, I know these are synonyms. There
is a reason why I chose this title. I will come back to why.
But then, the original title I had was never this. In an expeditious
manner of thinking - I had originally chosen a title "What do you want to
become when you grow up?” The
organizing team may have felt that title was a bit childish for their stature
of functioning and so I was asked if I could come up with a better one. The
responsive person that I am, I quickly changed it to what it is now. "What do you want to become when you
grow up?". How many of us had always dreamt of being an engineer right
from childhood and are blissfully living our childhood dream here? To be utterly
honest, I never had a clue during my childhood that I would end up working in
an IT services firm. While in my first grade, I wanted to be a teacher. Reasons:
My mom was a professor and I liked my class teacher Ms. Syamala very much.
Participating in PTA meetings made me realize that being a teacher is a risky
job. By high school, I had developed an interest in reading, writing and
painting and even tried my hands in versification – and I knew that I would
grow up to be a journalist (who also paints). And here I am – trying to find
certain technically skilled people, wondering what revenue targets to set and debating on project margins! The closest I get
to journalism is Project Proposal Documents, Client Visit Preparations and the Annual
award nominations (thanks to HR). Am I happy with my job? Yes I am. I have a
comfortable job, I enjoy my work and, I earn enough. But then, when have I last
changed my life’s ambition? When have I last aspired to do something by my own?
Unfortunately, not in the past many years – after that wishful journalist dream
that got diluted almost as fast as it sprouted.
Here is our first introspection moment: When have you last changed your
life’s ambition? Do we really need a dream to chase, to be happy and
accomplished in life?
There is a large bunch amongst us, who are inspired by Steve Jobs and
Apple Inc. Who created the first Apple Computer?
Was it Jobs? What did Jobs do? As a child, did Steve Jobs always dream
of being a highly successful entrepreneur? How many of us associate Jerry Kaplan with tablets? Kaplan
supposedly got the idea of pen computing while on a private flight with a
friend of his. His company's (GO Corporation’s) technology was precursor to the
Palm and the Apple and was used by AT&T to develop the first tablet. If we
read about the journey of all these people to where they finally landed up, none
of them seem to have started with a dream and a much cherished ambition. Wozniak
and Kaplan are not the most familiar names on bill boards and book shelves.
Does that make Wozniak or Kaplan any less accomplished?
The organizing team had published an interview of mine recently where
they asked me about a role model. In my response to that question I had
mentioned about Nandan Nilekani. He has a legendary status, being the co-founder of Infosys. I have always been inspired by him from the first time I have
directly heard him speak. What I found awesome about him is that he had the
courage to let go of his status, start something from scratch and, that too
something very complex at that (the UIDAI program). What would have driven him to take such a risk?
Did he really have to prove his ability to anyone then?
Let us introspect on few less famous people – us – the people who are in
this room. What do you consider as an accomplishment? When we are done with
this job and when we look back – what do we consider as our "individual" accomplishment? What really makes you proud of yourself? Does it always have to
be something accepted in high regard by a society or an organization? What if
you are successful at one place and then get to move to a different place and
work with a new set of people? Do you think there is a chance that your success
will diminish? This is where I feel our definitions of an accomplishment and a
success should differ. Again, while I have introspected, I should honestly admit that I have not done much about myself in the recent years.
I have heard a lot of people say “I want to do something different in
life, something that makes me feel good. I know for sure it is not what I am
doing now. However I have not yet figured out what I should be doing”. I have even heard friends say "somebody give me an idea, I will execute" :) While we
are clear that what we are doing now, is not what we want to do with life,
where does the resistance to try something different come from? In my opinion, it stems from two fears: (1) The Fear of Failure (2) The nudging Q in our
subconscious on whether "this will fetch me a living”. Quitting a job & running a debt
chasing an unknown passion, may not be the brightest practical idea. If you are
still not sure on what your passion is around - be assured that you are not
alone. However, for a moment think that you need to do something with your life
that you feel good about and happy about. You may not know it
already or You may. You have to try out varied little interests and be
patient with the time you spend on these. It is not about digits on paychecks, the titles and designations. It need not be a new job or a change in career. Try out
interests in a small fashion, do not chase them as potential source of new/ big income. It is similar to the case of food. Until and unless you taste the
varieties how you would know what appeals to your senses of smell and taste and, agrees with your tummy. You would not jump onto making a food you happen to like
now, your ‘staple food’.
The feeling of accomplishment could come from seemingly simple steps. I felt accomplished when I baked a decent
cake. I never had the dream of being a chef; I hated cooking & baking till
about a year back. My interests changed over time and have been influenced by
multiple factors. Can any of you guess one the happiest things I have done so
far? It was the break I took in 2006 for about a year. None of the appreciation
emails, the good appraisal ratings, the awards – has given me the sense of happiness that
that break gave me. The break changed my perception of life and the way I
consider my job. I was not idle. I read, I cooked, I walked, I traveled,
watched more than 200 movies, I wrote and I lived without a Television or a
Mobile Phone.
Most of us could proudly say that we have attained equilibrium - "A condition in which all acting influences
are canceled by others, resulting in a stable, balanced, or unchanging system".
Here is another favorite question - "Where do you see yourself in 3 years’
time?" Honestly, I have no clue where I would be 3 or 5 years from now. It
could be a string of life events that we did not have control on or, which we
did not think of controlling ourselves - that have brought us to where we are
today. It could have been a conscious decision too. Being where we are at
present, with “our current skills paying our bills” - should we act as if we
are done (the “happily-ever-after” “state of equilibrium”). Should we not look
forward on what we can do next? Should we not be inquisitive and curious?
Assume that we love the place we are in and the work we do. Let go off
the boundary of a client or a project and get our skill and our knowledge to
the next level of usage. A lot of us stop a little too quickly. Can we truly
term ourselves highly skilled labor? Keep asking "what next" and not
"what 3 years down the line". With time we do hone our skills
better and with these new skills & knowledge, we should be equipped to think
better on our next step. We should not be afraid to try roles or work items
that you feel like trying. Do not let anything cloud your wish – such excuses
as 'I cannot identify an interest that makes me feel good', 'I really want to try
something but I want to be settled first' or 'I do not think I have enough
knowledge to try something'. The idea is not to be famous or rich – the idea is
to leverage the differentiation we have as humans – the ability to think and
change our ways.
We need not always have one dream to focus on and, chase for life. We
need not define an end point, we need not pre-define our life and career. Discover
and chase an aspiration at a time – that takes lesser time for you to achieve
and one that you can surely achieve. As for young parents here - stop asking your
children what they want to become when they grow up. Help them explore as many
varieties of activities and topics and ask them on what they wish to do next or
learn next. There is nothing sweeter than discovering how much we enjoy something
new.
Encourage ourselves and the next generation to understand and realize
what an accomplishment could be for an individual. Assert the individuality. It is about what you want to do with your life. Let
us aspire to scale little & closer steps, than chase a long drawn ambition. The
little and the easier aspirations and our accomplishments will finally get us
to an ambitious life! I wish each of you the courage to be truthful about
yourself. The nerve to try, the confidence to accomplish, the will to challenge
the accepted norms of ‘a good life’ and the passion to live a very happy life.
2 comments:
Awesome!
Surprisingly I had similar train of thoughts last week! I had been thinking"Bill Gates and Steve jobs" never knew what they were going to become when they started.
Was also thinking about how my son should grow. I dont want me or my wife to say what he should become but get him to experience multiple roles (music, acting, sports, study etc) so that he can decied what he really wants to be when he grow!
Interesting Indu ... :)
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