Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He plays a sport and has a part time job. That, plus school. I guess, what do you want from him? Plenty of very successful people don’t find a passion and go on to have great careers and lives.
OP here - thanks, this is exactly what I need to hear, I think. I'm surrounded by people who "have passions" and "work their dream jobs" and their kids all Have A Thing They Do. He's a great kid. Very caring and emotionally intelligent. I'll try to put my rotors down....
Anonymous wrote:It’s normal. I magically found my passion in the workplace at nearly 30. I had an undergrad degree in engineering and an MBA by then. He’ll keep moving. He may not be “interested” in any of it, but it’s fine.
Business Administration is a really good catch all degree.
Anonymous wrote:He plays a sport and has a part time job. That, plus school. I guess, what do you want from him? Plenty of very successful people don’t find a passion and go on to have great careers and lives.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My personal view is that kids only find things they like by trying new things. Sitting at home on your butt will not result in inspiration. I'd encourage him to get out there and try all the things that sound interesting. It doesn't have to be a lifelong commitment, but he needs to be exploring interests now.
I'd be particularly careful that anxiety is not holding him back from putting himself out there.
We've encouraged him to try new stuff throughout his life. Nothing ever seemed to "catch" him, though. Endless different sports, arts, student groups, etc. etc. We'd ensure he gave each one a fair go, but he was never particularly interested by any of them, and never (to be brutally honest) particularly good at any of them, with the possible exception of drawing.
His spare time is spent talking, playing video games with friends, hanging out with friends. Playing with the dogs; hanging out with us. Learning to drive. Plays a sport each season and works a very part-time job.
Anonymous wrote:My personal view is that kids only find things they like by trying new things. Sitting at home on your butt will not result in inspiration. I'd encourage him to get out there and try all the things that sound interesting. It doesn't have to be a lifelong commitment, but he needs to be exploring interests now.
I'd be particularly careful that anxiety is not holding him back from putting himself out there.