The Myth of Passion: Why Loving Your Job Isn’t the Point
We’ve been told to “do what you love” so many times it’s practically career gospel. But what if that advice has quietly made us miserable? The truth: you don’t need to love your job for it to be meaningful—or even sustainable. Here’s why chasing passion might actually be holding you back.
1. Passion Is a Moving Target
Passion isn’t permanent—it’s a feeling that shifts with time, energy, and burnout levels. You might adore your job one year and dread it the next, and that’s not failure—it’s evolution. The myth assumes passion is a destination; in reality, it’s a variable. The healthiest careers adapt to that, not fight it.
2. Not Every Hobby Should Pay Rent
Turning what you love into what you do changes your relationship with it. When creativity becomes currency, joy becomes output. Many people burn out not because they stop loving the work—but because it stops feeling like theirs. It’s okay to keep some passions sacred.
3. Meaning > Passion
You don’t have to wake up “excited” every day to have a good career. What people actually crave is purpose—the sense that what they do matters or aligns with their values. Meaning sustains you when motivation fades. Passion burns hot; purpose burns long.