(Continued from Part 1. This might not make much sense unless you have at least glanced at Part 1!)
3. Most people are not ready to put in the amount of effort it takes to excel, in whatever field they choose to do so.
3. Most people are not ready to put in the amount of effort it takes to excel, in whatever field they choose to do so.
While
it is true that some of our talents are innate aka genetic, a lot of it
is the amount of time you put in (Check out "Outliers" by Gladwell on
this!) Whether you want to be the artist or the tennis player or the
entrepreneur, you are not going to get there with no work. Movie
directors often make it look like everyone who starts a new company
succeeds and every guy who wants to write is eventually published. (If
it's a Tamizh movie, probably in the course of one song (Must watch Thamizh Padam's take on this :D)) But the reality is that most
people score badly or end up in BPOs not because they were
super-geniuses forced to make money, but because they did not care to
put in the hours of effort needed to excel. So, if they suddenly quit
and become a photographer, they will probably do as badly. (Or worse,
because photography doesn't pay well!). As somebody said "When people
talk of an overnight success, they forget the million sleepless nights
of work that made it". People forget that even so-called geniuses had to
work hard, skip lunches, not attend parties, have pathetic private
lives, not watch TV, not sleep for days together and exercise immense
self-control to get where they were.
The
reason many people tell you to follow the system is because it works,
and without having to do any of this. Even a person with almost zero
understanding of atomic physics and differential equations who will not
spend his nights reading IEEE papers can be trained to write Perl
Scripts and to test Linux kernels. No, I'm not saying software is dumb
or something. Just that most of the software that people write is
simple, involves incremental changes over existing code, and someone can
be trained to write it. Which is obvious, because how could an entire
nation of youngsters be super good at something extraordinarily
difficult? The same is true of most other industrial work. Anyway, the point is that when movies/articles talk about
following your passion, they conveniently forget that it involves a lot
of hard work that most people are not ready to put in, and a lot of
sacrifices that people are not ready to make.
I repeat, it is NOT easy to excel.
And guess what,
4. Most people don't give a damn as long as they can pay the bills and be respected.
What
do the majority of people want? To win a Nobel after killing
themselves with work or a house and a car, a nice spouse with 2 kids
and respect from society? It's not hard to find the answer. Look around
you and think about how many people ARE killing themselves with work and
how many are trying to survive average jobs? Doesn't that say
something? It is not that someone would reject an Oscar or a Nobel or a
Pulitzer if they were given one. It is that they do not particularly need
it to feel happy, and are not ready to screw up their lives in search
of an elusive (and mirage-like) dream. Which makes sense.
In
that context, it is way easier to take a standard education, standard
job and go through the routine conveyor belt of life. For all the hype
about taking the off-beaten path, it is thorny, and you will probably be
too hurt before you reach anywhere on it. I find it almost dumb to
criticize the system simply because most people who do it, do so
because others do it. It shows that you do not understand why the system
works and have not thought enough to realize that it is not as easy as it appears. And all the debate about the Indian education not emphasizing on
choosing your own path etc. ignores the economic side of the equation so
much that it is annoying. If your parents took a housing loan and an
education loan to get you where you were, instead of vacationing in Hawaii, why is it wrong for them to
expect that you will make SOME money? They are just trying to ensure
that you don't have to go through the hardships that they had to. Ya, I
hate being forced into anything, but I at least understand why the
previous generation wants job security over random jumping between
professions.
You
might probably be thinking that I'm trying to bring in the economic
aspect to much. "Life is not all money and not everyone is like you
say. People do want to follow their dreams". Which brings me to my last
point.
5. Most people who claim that you should follow your dreams do not do so in real life.
I suspect most people wouldn't agree with this either. Anyway, a
simple example. Almost everybody I know liked 3 idiots. And almost
everybody I know (of approximately my age) claims that "one should follow
their dreams". But guess what. 90% of the aforementioned people are in
some big corp slaving away or enrolled in MBA degrees. In fact, the
people who most vehemently oppose (1)-(4) are the ones who say "What to
do, yaar? One must pay the bills". All i want to ask is- if that's what
you think, why don't you say it? Why do you want to preach to the world
that it's good to die for your passion and then go make money yourself?
But that's not just it. There is a self-righteous way people criticize
the Indian education system and societal pressure- almost as if they did
not have a choice to simply walk out of society and take an independent
stand. People who go on the off-beaten track have to pay the price of
ostracism and excruciating labor. If you really think that's what you
want, just go do it. There is no point in claiming that the system
screwed you. If you did not want to become the Java expert, you could
simply have chosen an arts degree and earned 3-4k a month. Having a readymade path for
people is an optimization. You could choose to explore, but don't glorify
exploring while blaming the system and don't ignore the fact that the
system has made things very easy for you.
On
a related note, a lot of people think that the Indian education system sucks. There is some truth to it, but saying that "I am as bad as I am because the system didn't try hard enough" is lame! If you did not understand the stuff taught in your
school, you had the option of reading up more. Yes, it was the system's
responsibility to make it interesting enough. But, if it didn't, don't
blame the system, for your not having the interest or the determination
to learn better. There are enough people I know who are products of the
same system and who have an excellent understanding of what they learned.
So, if it was anybody's fault, it was yours.
Another
thing. People often see the western system of education and think it is
awesome etc. I agree it is awesome that they have good teachers, good
facilities and emphasize on learning by doing. But I really think that
all the lack of exams, lenient correcting, not emphasizing on marks,
stunts your brain. In fact, if you see the average intelligence of the
American public, you would be stunned. Besides, life is not easy or fair or
nice to you. So having a rigorous education system is a good way to
prepare children for future challenges.
Anyway, bottomline is that- when blaming the system or giving career advice, try not to have double standards.. And try to understand why the "system" exists in the first place. And ya, when apprecdiating a movie like 3 idiots, draw the line on where the concept makes sense and where it is just a naive simplification.
The biggest problem with the Indian education system is, it makes people learn the wrong way (by memorizing, rote learning, etc.). And teachers/parents support this. When I moved from CBSE to State Board in the XIth Std, I was shocked to see that even mathematics is taught that way!
ReplyDeleteIt is my opinion that self learning and deep specialization is the best. I don't see the need for any class after maybe 7th Std.