It was ever thing I had ever wanted to do.
And I was doing well in it.
Acing the exams.
Loving my research.
My professors loved me.
My students were jealous of me.
My guide told me I could be the fastest to complete my thesis.
But...
I was good at what I was doing, but I wasn't happy.
And it was for the first time that it struck me.
Being good at something and being happy doing it, are two different things.
I'd been taught if you are good at something you automatically become happy doing it.
I dropped out of my PhD, came back to India and at the age of 24 had to start life all over again.
And it was awesome.
I was working with super smart people, on real-world complex problem, getting paid a lot of money.
And I was good at it.
It genuinely made me happy.
I loved the flights, the hotels, the work.
But...
It wasn't what the world needed.
Not as per my definition of a need.
I had a strange feeling of satisfaction, but uselessness.
IKIGAI
A Japanese term that roughly translates to "a reason for being"
And suddenly everything made sense.
Several people have studied Okinawians to figure out the reason.
Prima facie, there is nothing spectacular or extraordinary about Okinawa.
Until, you hear them say Ikigai...
I felt that the world doesn't need consulting.
That is MY view.
Not the world's view.
Everything that exists in the world exists because someone needs it.
I may feel happy getting paid much lower than my peers and that suffices for me
Or I may think that I need to be paid atleast this much else it work for me.
The endless number of people in jobs that they are good at and are paid for - are simply living a profession.
Not their Ikigai.
Not their Ikigai.
Not their Ikigai.
They are living out a vocation.
Not their Ikigai.
I realized, it wasn't so much the intersection of all 4 circles that was interesting, it was the intersection of 3 or lesser circles that explained what I had felt in life so far
Explaining a situation that is close to Ikigai that we may be tricked to believing we are living it, when the truth is we aren't.
It explained to me why I felt uselessness while in consulting, why I felt empty while at Groupon.
The meaning of your life, is the intersection of ALL 4 things, not 3 or 2.
And understanding what the intersection of 3/2 circles means, brings us closer to the meaning of Ikigai.
Several books and prescriptions exist out there.
Most of them delve into what I consider "on the surface" prescriptions.
Here is what worked for me...
2. Make a laundry list of things that you love doing
3. Find the intersection
3a. If none, go back to your childhood / early days and recollect things that made people wonder "how did you do that?". Dig deep and far back.
For instance, you love singing and are good at it. The world doesn't need your singing. But it needs singers.
This is going to be hard, long drawn, and will require discipline.
You are converting your passion into "Delight and fullness, but no wealth"
And devote 3-5 years towards it.
With NO pressure of making money off it.
Just for the joy of it
For the love of it.
At some point, you will unlock value.
It is inevitable, if you have devoted yourself to it.
They think of their journey as the purpose itself.
Fin.
But it is just that.
The start.
I encourage you to go beyond the book.
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