The next logical step once you've asked The Question is to try to answer it.
Easier said than done.
There is no single correct way to find the answer. The best I can do is try to recall my method.
I looked at all of things I like to do.
The list went like (write software, design software, write screenplays, take pictures, write music, graphic arts).
Now this is not a list of things I can make money at. Nor things that I'm good at.
The list contains activities that I like to do.
I could have stopped here but I wanted to understand what each item in this list has in common.
After a little while, I realized that all of these things had creativity in common.
Digging a little deeper, I also realized that all of these things require almost nothing but an imagination.
So I created an abstract version of my answer:
There it was.
Now the power of an abstract answer is that I can use it like a touchstone to compare an activity that wasn't in my original list to see if I would like it.
For example, painting isn't on my list but it fits the abstract answer. It's something that you create just using your mind.
So I'd probably like painting.
Reviewing the process:
- Make a list of activities you like to do
- Figure out what they all have in common
- Create a single statement that encompasses all of the activities in an abstract way
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