不必擅长你喜欢做的事
人总是有很多不知道从哪里来的心理包袱。我的其中一个包袱是:要做什么事就要把它做好。要是做不好,就别做了。
家长喜欢让小朋友上「兴趣班」,叫它「精进班」可能更合适。因为如果小朋友画了一年画、学了一年钢琴还没太大进步,不仅老师丧失了耐心,家长可能都要劝退。家长不是花钱让你做你喜欢的事情,而是盼着哪一天你可以在亲戚朋友面前表演。
难怪我们将时间工具化,做什么事都要为了些什么。
Oliver Burkeman 在《Four Thousand Weeks》写道,「你可以在你的爱好上平庸,甚至你还希望自己平庸。」因为沉浸在爱好的乐趣,来自对事情本身的享受。最好别让其他利益玷污了你的热爱。
他说他很享受在自己的电钢琴上敲打出一首曲子。以他「黑猩猩般」的音乐水平,他根本不用担心这个爱好获得金钱奖励或众人好评。相比之下,写作就给他更大的压力——想到自己可能写出一篇受人喜爱的好文,「我就无法保持完全沉浸的状态。」
可是做自己热爱但却不擅长的事情,到底给了我们什么?
或许是自由,一种可以追求徒劳与无意义的自由:
[The publisher and editor Karen Rinaldi] dedicates every spare moment she can to [surfing], and even wiped out her savings on a plot of land in Costa Rica for better access to the ocean. Yet she readily admits that she remains an appalling surfer to this day. (It took her five years of attempting to catch a wave before she first managed to do so). But “in the process of trying to attain a few moments of bliss,” Rinaldi explains, “I experience something else: patience and humility, definitely, but also freedom. Freedom to pursue the futile. And the freedom to suck without caring its revelatory.” Results aren’t everything. Indeed, they’d better not be, because results always come later—and later is always too late.
如果你喜欢这篇,你可能还会喜欢这篇长文:《一份直面现实的时间管理指南》