driven
Friday, December 18th, 2009
When I was about to enter college, I was leaning to pursue a pre-law course. A degree in psychology also appealed to me. However buildings and bridges belonged too to my interest.
My father always wanted a son for a lawyer, he might not told me but one could feel it. That’s why I took engineering.
There was a quiet issue between us back then, so I grabbed the bachelors that dealt with calculus, water resources and foundation designs.
Six years after getting my professional license, I wasn’t down somewhere in the province making sure macadam pavements be laid properly or in foreign shores managing pipelines. I don’t even end up designing trusses, rail beam reinforcements or storm drainage systems. I end up as a technical officer assisting people who have the same degree as mine.
The only consolation that keeps me grounded was the fact that I work for a company, which got almost half of the world’s major engineering projects. I was lucky too because the company offers steps in terms of career development or even a shift in different fields like geology if I choose too. But it doesn’t give me the kick.
It seems my constant credo for working is that it pays the rent. It is. A practical reasoning, but it’s a flag of my independence declared a few years back.
It might sound I am ranting about the frailty of my decision. Generally I’m happy.
It makes me sometimes unsure of yourself though to find some people of my age financially successful or is an advanced stage of their careers. Like this IU, a blogger, I wished I have his drive and propelled myself in the corporate ladder.
Of course I started counting my days, I started enumerating dreams that should have been achieved. I’m 28, I’m no longer young. Funny, my common advice I solicit to friends and stranger alike doesn’t usually in operation when comes to me. I say to them, go as far as you can see and when you get there, you’ll see farther.
Why am I like this? Maybe because my family is not success oriented or driven. I read in order to know yourself better, you have to know the family history. How your father was raised or how your lola dealt with people. As far as this argument is concern, it is true we are not success oriented. My ate who finished and was a registered nurse was a homemaker. My next to the eldest sister or ditse, a grad of chemical engineering was also a housewife. My youngest sister (whom I was next to, a marketing graduate), she was at home, ain’t working for ages. My father since I was born didn’t have a job like most fathers but instead played the role as a househusband patriach. My nanay sew clothes and dresses. Her earnings feeds the family ever since.
Our values and set of morals also affects our decision. I for one is really afraid of having too much money, making decisions for other people and I hate expectations. Thus explain why I didn’t took a pre-law course.
Some people will call it pride.
So, is this a life live well?
I am now in another angle viewing myself, unfortunately, I don’t think so. =(
Previous Comments
i recall when we were together at MOA some three years back, you were telling me that youd probably pursue law…
that moment you gave Dianne to me, remember? shes still with me BTW.
=D
Posted by Cloud at December 19, 2009, 11:34 pmdo not worry what others may think. it all about you and your choices. wala ng iba.
True that the drive (or lack thereof) to succeed can be deduced from the values practiced in our domestic lives, but it also is partly a function of free will.
Like saying you being driven is directly proportional to the objectives you have. Whether or not this is to emulate a longstanding tradition, the voracious lure of mediocrity, or the sordid attempt of reinvention.
My family is weird in various accounts. My dad never graduated (because of being an activist) yet was pirated from one company to another (although unfortunately the companies go bankrupt one after another as well). My mom is a certified genius with a Magna Cum Laude from a double quota course, graduating 2 years ahead while working full-time in a law firm. Yet she chose to be a homemaker, despite earning 4 times my dad’s salary at the time they got married. My older brother is a licensed ECE from Mapua, yet chose to pursue a career in the BPO industry.
And me? Architecture wasn’t my first choice. Visual Design was. But my HS contract prevented me from this, as well as my parents’ dismissal of fine arts as a second-rate profession. So I ended up in architecture (after a short stint in CE) and I have chosen to love it. To breathe it. To own it.
Because architecture is a religion.
What am I saying here? Success is never fully measured against the yardstick of professions. The best gauge would be what the person perceives as most important. Whether this be ardor affairs, familial bonds, financial security or acuity in their craft.
Me? I just need to earn. I’ve got mouths to feed, hehe. Sometimes it gets boring, but so long as it gets the bills paid and the groceries bought. I won’t fret. Recession ngayon eh.
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Introspection is good.
If you think you can do more professionally, you better start doing it, before it is too late.
Posted by dr. magsasaka at December 19, 2009, 4:36 am