• cobysev
    link
    English
    1211 months ago

    I always found it interesting how our environment only provides genius-level experts with our current skills/technology/social trends/etc. For instance, the greatest racecar driver in existence could’ve been some young person born in the 1200s, but because cars didn’t exist back then, they never got the ability to show of their raw natural talent and instead lived a boring life as a baker or blacksmith.

    Amadeus Mozart was amazing for his time, but his time put more value on performance arts, requiring children to learn about classical/traditional music as part of their schooling from a young age. His father recognized his raw talent at a very young age and peddled his skills across the European elite to make money. Nowadays, there are so many complex fields in the world, we may have thousands of Mozart-level composers, but they’ve never even considered making music, and thus live out their lives in a boring office cubicle setting.

    Who knows, I might’ve been a world-famous trapeze artist in the circus, but I never ran away from home, so now I live a boring life doing IT work. /Shrug

    • DacoTaco
      link
      English
      8
      edit-2
      11 months ago

      I believe this is where hobbies are an very important role in our lives. My current job has nothing to do with my first long term job i did. In those 9 years i did that job i learned, through my hobbies, that i was good at understanding technology and how they worked/ticked. “fingerspitzengefühl” as the germans would call it.

      This has resulted in me doing evening classes and switching jobs in a completely different field with a completely different description.

      Would i have known without my hobbies? Absolutely not.