Saturday, July 23, 2005

What did you want to be when you grew up?


When I was seven years old I wanted to be an author. Not a writer, but an author. As in, “guy who writes books.” Why I chose that career, I’m not sure. Maybe I liked writing. Maybe I thought books were cool. Or maybe it was just the first answer I could come up with.

The truth is, I never really gave it much thought.

That is, not until one random day about 6 months ago when I was giving a speech to a group of 7th graders. I started telling these kids about the two books I'd written when it hit me like a ton of books. Yes, books – not bricks.

Oh my God! I thought. I really AM an author!

At that moment I realized that there truly is something to be said about the career aspirations of kids. You see, the younger a person is the less likely his hopes and dreams are to be influenced by his parents, peers, money, fame or even college major. After all, when you're seven years old - you don’t know anything, you just talk from your heart.

Unfortunately, somewhere down the line kids stop using their hearts and begin using their heads. And the result is: they think too much.

Don’t get me wrong. Thinking is good. But sometimes, you just have to listen to your heart.

Now I know that’s a bit cliché. To be honest with you, I don’t even know how the whole “listen to your heart” process works. It’s probably different for everybody.

But I DO believe that success leaves clues.
And I DO believe that certain experiences in our lives are indicators of our true nature.

A few years ago I read an interview in Spin magazine with Bono, one of my heroes and also one of the great rock stars of my time. When asked about the musical development of U2’s songs, Bono quoted Michelangelo and said, “The sculpture is already in the stone.”

The sculpture is already in the stone. I never forgot that.

That means every time Michelangelo sat down to sculpt one of his many masterpieces, the piece was already finished. All he had to do was chip away.

That means every time Bono and his band mates sat around the studio to record a track for their next classic album, the song was already complete. All they had to do was chip away.

I think people are the same way. When each of us is born, we’re nothing but a big block of stone. Blank, untouched and unformed. But every single day of our lives is like a piece of that stone is being chipped away by our experiences. And eventually, there will come a time – probably some random Tuesday at 2:30 PM – when we will look in the mirror at what used to be a plain old block of stone, and see a great masterpiece: the sculpture of the person we were born to be.

And when that moment comes, my GOD...it’s beautiful. It reminds me of a great quotation I recently heard from best selling author and NSA past president Mark Sanborne, "There are two great moments in a person’s life: the moment he was born and the moment he realizes WHY he was born."

LET ME ASK YA THIS...

What did you want to be when you grew up? Did you become that person?

* * * *
Scott Ginsberg
Author/Speaker/That guy with the nametag
www.hellomynameisscott.com

6 Comments

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6 Comments:

At 12:28 PM, Blogger MyFlightBlog said...

Scott - Your post made me think of a book a friend of mine wrote. Marc Marsan is one of America's top Out-of-Box thinkers. He recently wrote a book called "Think Naked". The description is: Think Naked introduces you to four, easy-to-apply principles that will shake you out of you adult-thinking patterns and empower you to flourish and excel using your natural-born, childlike brilliance.

He helps people think more like they did when they were kids when they had great creativity and were not afraid of what others think. It is a great book.

Congratulations on reaching one of your childhood dreams!

 
At 10:04 PM, Blogger Wendy Kenney said...

Hi Scott!!!! I'm so glad I found you!!! Where have you been all of my life? When I was a little girl I wanted to be a public speaker. Here I am all grown up and still trying to figure out how to get there. But I'll get there...Better late than never! Thanks for all of your advice!!

 
At 1:36 PM, Blogger Thom Singer said...

Scott-

I have an eight year old daughter. At age four she started saving her money to go to Paris someday. She had over $200 already. We surprised her with a stop in Paris on a recent trip to Italy.

She now believes she can do ANYTHING she sets her mind to. I hope she never loses that.

Here is a link to her Paris story on my blog: http://thomsinger.blogspot.com/2005/07/weekend-blog-5.html

 
At 7:33 PM, Blogger Consonante F. said...

When I was like 5 years-aold, I wanted to be a doctor. Then at 10, I wanted to be a veterinarian... and now XD I'm a law student =D


Your blog is very nice, btw

 
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At 2:17 AM, Anonymous Work Name Badges said...

Dear Scott, thanks for another super article, i just love this site, thanks for the hard work.

 

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