Ottawa Citizen

THE FOLLY OF FINDING ‘PASSION’

Forthcomin­g study points to the pitfalls

- TARA BAHRAMPOUR

Find your passion is a mantra dictated to everyone from college students to retirees to pretty much anyone seeking happiness.

But according to a forthcomin­g study from Stanford and Yale-NUS College in Singapore, it’s actually bad advice — and may actually make it harder for people to figure out what they love to do.

Why? The idea of finding one’s passion implies that people have built-in interests just waiting to be discovered and if you can simply figure out what they are you will magically be able to embrace them, says the study, which will be published in the journal Psychologi­cal Science.

But people with that mindset are more likely to give up on their new-found interest when they hit the inevitable roadblock, the study found. Instead, researcher­s say true passion develops through being open-minded about delving into a new topic and being willing to put some work into it.

Earlier studies had focused on people who had “fixed” versus “growth” mindsets about intelligen­ce — that is, whether one believes intelligen­ce is fixed (you either have it or you don’t) or it can be cultivated. In this study, researcher­s looked at the difference­s between people who believe interests are static and those who believe they can be developed with time and effort.

They conducted five experiment­s involving 470 participan­ts. In one, they recruited undergradu­ate students who identified either as “fuzzy” (interested in the arts and humanities) or “techie” (interested in STEM topics). They had the students read two articles — one about technology and the other about literary criticism — and found that those who held a fixed mindset about interests were less open to the article that was outside their interest area.

In another experiment, students were shown a video about black holes and the origin of the universe, which most found fascinatin­g. But when asked to read a denser scientific article on the same topic, the students with a fixed mindset lost interest more quickly than the ones who believed interests can be cultivated.

The study used undergradu­ates because “they ’re young and they ’re at a time in their life when they’re being bombarded with the idea that you have to go out and find your passion,” said Paul O’Keefe, assistant professor of psychology at Yale-NUS College and the paper’s lead author. “They might be waiting for that trigger to happen — ‘Oh yeah, that’s my interest after all’ — versus, ‘Maybe I’ll take this astronomy class, even though it looks hard.’ ”

Stanford psychologi­st Carol Dweck, a co-author of the study (and a pioneer in earlier research on fixed versus growth theories of intelligen­ce), said her undergradu­ates “at first get all starryeyed about the idea of finding their passion, but over time they get far more excited about developing their passion and seeing it through.”

If finding a calling through developing yourself sounds too vague, here’s a more concrete incentive: Developing a range of interests can also boost your grades and predict future success.

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 ?? GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O ?? Finding your passion implies it is there waiting to be found, but a new study suggests passion may develop through putting some work into tackling new topics with an open mind.
GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O Finding your passion implies it is there waiting to be found, but a new study suggests passion may develop through putting some work into tackling new topics with an open mind.

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