Indulge Your Obsessions When Choosing Your Life's WorkTo be happy, figure out how to make a living doing what you think about when you don't have to think about anything in particular.

BySarah Vermunt

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

My brother, Brad, has an undergraduate degree in mathematics and a master's degree in biology. Right now you're probably picturing him working as a scientist and wearing a white lab coat at work every day. If so, you're wrong. Dead wrong.

He's a television writer.

只要我能记住,布拉德被观察者sed with television. Not the get home from work and slump in front of the tube for hours of mindless consumption kind of obsession (that's just numbing out). Brad has always been an engaged television enthusiast, particularly for television comedy.

Related:Richard Branson on Finding Your Passion Project

He could (and does) watch, analyze, discuss, critique and create television for several hours every day. He gets caught up in it and loses all track of time when he's fully immersed in it. I can't think of anything he loves to do more.

Brad probably could have got a steady gig with great pay working in the sciences after completing his master's degree. He's a smart guy with a talent for math and science. Some of his research has been published in scientific journals. But that's not what he wanted for his career.

He didn't exactly hate biology, but he didn't love it either. In his spare time during his degree, he wrote spec scripts as a hobby. He wrote, filmed, acted in, and edited a web series, and a cable access sketch comedy series. None of these entrepreneurial projects made him any money. He just loved the work so much that he felt compelled to do it. Impractical and far fetched as it seemed, Brad decided to change course completely to try to make this television writer dream of his a reality.

Related:Mike Rowe From 'Dirty Jobs': Don't Follow Your Passion, Live It

He graduated with his master's in biology on a Friday and began his studies in film and television writing the next Monday. He poured what little money he had into it. He lived in a crappy apartment and worked part-time as a math tutor to make it happen. It wasn't (and still isn't) glamorous or lucrative, but now he's getting paid for doing what he loves.

Is there something in your life that you're obsessed with? Some kind of persistent fascination or curiosity? What makes you lose track of time? When have you been so completely engaged in an activity that you felt fully energized, like you could go on forever?

Do more of that, aspiring entrepreneur. Lean in to your obsessions, fascinations, and curiosities. Indulge your passions. Who knows where they might lead you.

Related:The Real Person's Guide to Finding Your Passion and Loving What You Do

Sarah Vermunt

Careergasm Founder

Sarah Vermunt is the founder ofCareergasm. As a career coach, she helps people quit jobs they hate so they can do work they love.

Editor's Pick

Related Topics

Business News

'Please Fix This': Elon Musk Frantically Emails Employees During Livestream Glitch

Musk attempted to livestream his visit to the U.S.-Mexico border.

Business News

Costco Isn't Facing Devastating Surges in Theft Like Target and Walmart — and the Reason Is Very Simple

The retailer's CFO revealed its strategy during a fourth-quarter-earnings call.

Business News

这些纽约Roommates Created a Fake Restaurant and Accidentally Garnered a 2,000-Person Waitlist — So They Opened a Pop-up for Real.

The Gen Z'ers dubbed their apartment "Mehran's Steak House" on Google Maps during the pandemic.

Business News

Video: Mass Flooding Takes Over NYC Streets, Subways and Parks

All of New York City is under a state of emergency.

Business News

Netflix Is Mailing Out Its Last DVD Today. I Got the Very First One 25 Years Ago.

Netflix co-founder and founding CEO Marc Randolph tells the story of the first Netflix DVD that got sent in the mail — and one he wished never went out the door.

Branding

Want to Improve Your Brand's Storytelling? Shift Your POV to Tell a Better Narrative. Here's How.

In a crowded digital media environment of voluntary engagement, brand storytelling isn't enough to grab attention. You must approach the story from the right perspective — your customer's.