Learn to Love the Work You Do
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Changing your perspective of the mundane and creating challenges specific to your own quirks and personality can add flair to life’s everyday tasks.
Most of my frustration in life has come from a single error in my thinking.
I wanted my life to be interesting, and so I thought that what I needed was big goals, big dreams, and lots of adventure.
But here’s the thing about those grand plans—even the most interesting life on the outside is filled with all sorts of mundane moments. There’s simply no way to feast on a steady diet of those adrenaline-inducing activities. Want to travel abroad? Prepare yourself to wait in lines, squeeze into small seats, search for places to do laundry, and many more not-so-exciting chores that only get harder when you’re away from home.
Any worthy endeavor is like this—from starting a business and learning a new hobby to planning a vacation and enjoying lifelong love.
And even if we could somehow eliminate all the mundane, we’d eventually grow weary of the constant excitement. That’s just the way we humans are, and it’s best to come to terms with it rather than fight it.
What have I learned from this struggle against my own nature?
If you work hard enough and remember to follow your curiosity along the way, exciting things are bound to happen. And these adventures will be all the more rewarding when they are icing on the cake, rather than an expectation you put on yourself all the time.
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Learning to Love the Work Is an Art
Here are some tips that have worked for me. I hope they prove to be a useful launching point in your own quest to find contentment and satisfaction with your everyday reality.Recognize the Value of the Task at Hand
In the past, I’ve been too quick to label certain tasks as a waste of time, when in fact, they are often the kinds of work that keep the gears of our lives turning. Everything from taking out the trash and replying to an email to paying a bill and picking up groceries—these are the kinds of jobs that aren’t glamorous, but in their aggregate make for a smoothly operating home life, if done with diligence. I think it’s time to raise their status and give them the credit they’re due.Take Satisfaction in the Ordinary Thrill of Making Progress
Some people use long-term goals as a source of motivation, but my experience has been that goals only abstractly motivate me, but not in the moment-to-moment parts of my life when I really need it.In order to stick with a goal for years of daily effort, you need more than just the prospect of eventual reward, and for me, that comes from the thrill of making progress. The most basic way is to create a checklist and enjoy the satisfaction of checking things off, but there are many ways to reinforce a sense of forward momentum in your life.


