Incandescence said:
The_root_of_all_evil said:
People have been told that work is good, work is right, work is serious.
I agree. People in general also have very strict boundaries between what they do for work and what they do for fun; they've also been told that work and play aren't supposed to mix, which is what makes someone like Bill Gerhardts "weird." Somehow, he's managed to make a living out of something that he loves, and I think the typical reaction to that is somewhere between jealousy and skepticism.
Personally, I have a very different approach. I was very determined for some time to become a music journalist, but once I'd tried it, I found out it didn't work. First of all, because I don't have what it takes - I can't conduct a meaningful interview with a musician because I don't really care what he has to say, and reviewing records soon turned out to be a fruitless effort to me. Sure I could do it, and the outcome was kind of nice, but I finally found out that my devotion to music (which is definetely there and strong) is not the kind that would make me want to write about it. I like music, and I like artists, and others I don't, and I have something of a dedicated taste - but I don't think there's anything more I could seriously say about it. It's kind of pointless.
That also spoilt my devotion and interest for music for some time. I found out that getting professionally involved with something I like, thus making it 'work', turns it all work and no fun. Psychologists call this 'corruption of internal motivation through external motivation': When you do something just because you like it, it becomes less interesting once someone expects you to do it.
This applies to a host of other things, too: At school, I always hated math, and the math I had to in college I hated, too. But recently, I started programming, and suddenly, all the same things that I had hated for the far better part of my life became incredibly interesting - just because I had chosen that I wanted to to them, instead of being made to do it.
To drive my rambling's point home: Some people just have to seperate work and their personal interests in order to make both work out. I'm perfectly happy to make my living with serious, 'boring' stuff as long as the actual work is challenging. (It's kind of seeing life as a game) Then I can go home and spend my time with things that I really enjoy and do them for nobody else than myself. It's rewarding.