And final note, when you find your passion you won't really have it. As Drenth notes our searching never ends, it just narrows. Sure I know that the answer I'm looking for (convergent truth) lies within computing, but it's still gnawing at me and I'm still searching ...
I'm glad you said that. Nearly done with a second degree and I'm not sure where it's taking me...or if I'm even on the right track. Perhaps I've just lost a bit of steam now that I'm so close.
It's like the chase is more exciting than the actual goal itself. Once I'm there, I'm like; "Now what?"
It makes me think that life isn't about goals as much as it is about how you enjoy the process of getting there...which means we have to be careful to pick fields that are going to leave many doors open in many directions....and be careful to not get too fixed upon 'achieving'.
Same with money. Once you have it, everything is kind of....the same. I therefore think it is great to have enough to be comfortable, while being aware of the effect that much wants more....I find the less material stuff I surround myself with the more inward focus and intellectual momentum I gather.
Then again...material gains have never been a main focus for me. While I made good money and had a "great" job, I was more miserable than ever because I had zero intellectual freedom and was working with/for mostly incompetent and greedy assholes. It zapped me internally.
That woman just makes me annoyed the way she goes on as if young people need to panic about getting organised early. Some of the life-goals she talks about have no appeal to me anyway, never did. I never wanted a family, for one. I never thought I would be as lucky to find one person who would be a potential life-partner; that happens to very few and very fortunate people. I really believe the reason why so many people are miserable in their relationships is because they think they can "make" it work. You shouldn't have to make it work, it will just work when you meet that person. And the chances of that are very small; probability will inevitably show us that we would have to go through a hell of a lot of people to eventually encounter the right sort of person. Which means....it could take time. Or that you'd have to get very busy in the going-out scene....what introvert wants to go through that?
I knew where I was heading career wise, but just happened to get quite ill so that I ended up having to re-plan my whole life. You cannot predict what will happen; you can plan, yes, but things happen that could turn everything around 180 degrees. As a result I'm somewhat poorer and more compromised for time, but I have never regretted anything I did. Without the not-so-great choices to remind us what we don't want, how can we know with so much damn certainty that we have indeed made a good choice?
This is why so many people get to middle age and start wondering about their choices; because they tied themselves into commitments too early.
Just another perspective.
The kind of people who would benefit from the sort of planning that this TED talker is talking about are perhaps certain types of people; people who yearn for stability and security. I never yearned for those things. I yearned for freedom, and most importantly; intellectual freedom.