All Articles Leadership Careers 4 reasons why “follow your dreams” is terrible career advice

4 reasons why “follow your dreams” is terrible career advice

The advice to "follow your dreams" in your career choice can lead you down the wrong path. LaRae Quy writes that it's worth taking your time to find the right path.

9 min read

CareersLeadership

follow your dreams

BitsAndSplits/Getty Images

Like many others on graduation day, I heard a commencement speaker talk about the importance of following my dream as I marched into the brave new world as an adult — silly me. My dream then was to be a fashion model who looked good in clothes.  A career in fashion would be my ticket into the world to which I aspired to join. But after three years as a buyer at a fancy department store in the dog-eat-dog world of retail, the most important thing I did during my day was persuade gullible women to buy stripes that season instead of polka dots.

Is this what following my dream looked like? Why did I take the commencement speaker’s advice? I wasn’t alone, though. From an early age, we’re beaten over the head with the advice that we should always follow our dreams and pursue our passion. And don’t get me started on the self-help industry with promises of self-improvement.

The follow-your-dream mentality is a scam because the subliminal message behind the hyperbole is that you deserve to follow your dreams. You owe it to yourself to pursue them at all costs. Once you achieve your dreams, you will live happily ever after. Americans have been raised on a diet high in dreams, from fairy tales to superheroes. Researchers at Stanford University have determined that the “follow your dreams and passion” advice can hinder our success because it limits our professional dreams, particularly at the start of our work lives. If we enter the workplace convinced that we already know what we want to do in life, we ignore new opportunities. 

We can’t dream what we don’t know. We are in the midst of unparalleled change and disruption, and suddenly, the so-called safe routes in our career choices may not be all that safe.

Here are four reasons why following your dreams is terrible life advice:

1. Follow dreams, passion or purpose

On the surface, it’s hard to discern the difference between these three terms; they are often used interchangeably, but it’s crucial to make distinctions.

Dreams are fantasies with a high aim in life. They can empower us to map out our future and move toward a greater destiny. Or, they can fizzle and die. At some point, most of us dream about rising from our glum existence to become the owner of a wildly successful business, a renowned expert, a rock star, a billionaire, the perfect parent — the list goes on.

Dreams can be like a fairy tale; Cinderella is perhaps one of our most beloved. We tend to forget that Cinders went through tough times before her dream of escaping her existence came true. She was starved, beaten and treated like a slave. Our dreams don’t come true with wishful thinking or fantasizing about a better way of life. 

You may dream about following your passion, a favorite topic of books and articles. Passion is about you. You are passionate about — whatever. Purpose is about something besides you. It de-emphasizes “you” because purpose is when you pursue something outside yourself rather than pursue something that gives you pleasure.

Passion asks what can the world give to me? Purpose asks what I can contribute to the world. If I’m going to discover what is important to me, I need to get off my butt and find it. I don’t need to be overwhelmed by emotion to know that it’s the right thing for me.

People are so conditioned to look for happiness that they give up at the first sign something won’t be fun. They feel entitled to love every second of their job, and if they’re slapped in the face with something unpleasant, they pick up their ball and go home. Yeah, that’s why pursuing passion is for amateurs. It also sounds a bit childish.

The truth is this: dreams and passion are for amateurs because they give us easy questions. I mean, we can all find stuff to love and dream about. It’s where people stop on their way to finding the answer to the bigger question: What can you do with your life that is important?

How to make it work for you:

  • Passion, dreams and happiness are essential for good mental health, but finding and living your purpose is critical to having a meaningful, fulfilling life.
  • Find out what drives you. Is there anything that touches you so deeply that it causes you pain? Does it drive your behavior? Often, a powerful purpose can come from powerful pain.
  • Find out what energizes you. You need to know the problem you want to solve; you must also discover how you can make a unique contribution to solving the problem. 
  • Find out what or who you want to help. Are you drawn to animals in need? The rescue of abused children? The environment? You may not be able to save the world, but you can significantly impact your community. There are many ways to chip away at the problem, but finding your path is up to you.  

2. Dreams grow and change

Follow your dreams is crap advice because it assumes that you will only have one dream in life. People are dynamic and adaptive; you will continue to evolve at every stage in your life. What was once a dream or passion can become nothing more than a fond memory as time passes. 

We can benefit from dreams, but it’s critical to understand the difference between possessing a dream and having the dream possess us. If we stick with a prefabricated blueprint of our future, we miss new opportunities that pop up all around us. Following opportunities is likely to help us create mature dreams for our lives that are specific to our skills and talents. 

We may get everything we’ve dreamed of, but reality can set in and remind us that fulfillment and dreams are not always the same thing. Many of our dreams turn out to be superficial and shallow. They may bring short bouts of happiness but also a sense of emptiness if those dreams do not align with our purpose. 

How to make it work for you

  • How many of your early dreams were really yours, as opposed to other peoples’ dreams foisted upon you?
  • How many of your early dreams still ring true?
  • Which dreams are rooted in insecurities as a younger person?
  • Which dreams can help you realistically move forward in your career now?

3. Find your worth

Young people entering the workforce believe they will be at the forefront of professional success. However, for them to feel “engaged” at work, the truth is, they need to look around them and “engage” with their work first. 

In the workplace, our worth is not determined by how we feel but by what we do. This is a tough lesson to learn because we’ve raised a generation of young people who are accustomed to getting a prize for just showing up, and words like failure are pasted over with platitudes from parents and school administrators.

As a result, many young people feel betrayed when handed tasks that are boring or don’t inspire them. They were told they could achieve anything in life but they were not told it would take more than dreams and promises. They were not told they would need to earn their professional success.

This can undercut their sense of worth. We are all born with personal worth, but we have to earn our professional worth. Summer internships, academic records, or your last job don’t matter once you enter a new workplace. We start fresh. 

When our careers are starting, we should expect to be stuck with menial labor and crappy jobs because someone has to do them. Once we’re on the job, people will only know our worth once they know our work. That takes time, effort and consistency. It’s not based on promises but on results. 

How to make it work for you:

Work on your worth at home and the office. Never settle for less than you deserve, but recognize that you may be a bit worthless until you know the ropes.

4. Differentiate between dreams and reality

Only some people can drop everything they have to follow a dream or passion that may or may not be able to support them. A professional in a demanding job may spend less time than they desire with family and home, but they need to make house payments. A successful professional could rationalize leaving their job that pays for expenses like health care to pursue a new career making wood sculptures. They would be living their dream, but what about income to send their kids to school and pay medical bills?

Unless you are a fantastic artist who can compete with other incredible artists in the real world, most people can only afford to indulge themselves part-time. 

That is life; most of us are responsible to people other than ourselves. Pain, frustration and disappointment are facts of life. It’s what you do with those reactions that make the difference. Our dreams will not solve our current problems. A wise person will learn how to deal with the crap in their life rather than pursuing some ideal in the future. 

How to make it work for you: 

Take a long, loving look at what motivates you. Bookshelves and articles are loaded with tips on following your dreams, finding your passion and instantly curing your boredom, but you don’t need to be remarkable. All you need to be is someone who contributes to society in a way that motivates you.

Give up the fantasy of a perfect life. Most jobs have a bit of suck to them, but you can still find aspects of your situation that bring you joy and fulfillment. 

Opinions expressed by SmartBrief contributors are their own.

____________________________________

Take advantage of SmartBrief’s FREE email newsletters on leadership and business transformation, among the company’s more than 250 industry-focused newsletters.