This ode to wisdom and maturity comes to us via David Brooks, who is an op-ed columnist for the New York Times.
Read more of Mr. Brooks' musings here:
"You should regard yourself as the sole author of all your future achievements and as the grateful beneficiary of all your past successes.
As you go through life, you should pass through different phases in
thinking about how much credit you deserve. You should start your life
with the illusion that you are completely in control of what you do. You
should finish life with the recognition that, all in all, you got
better than you deserved.
In your 20s, for example, you should regard yourself as an Ayn Randian
Superman who is the architect of the wonder that is you. This is the
last time in your life that you will find yourself truly fascinating, so
you might as well take advantage of it. You should imagine that you
have the power to totally transform yourself, to go from the pathetic
characters on “Girls” to the awesome and confident persona of someone
like Jay-Z.
This sense of possibility will unleash feverish energies that will
propel you forward. You’ll be one of those people who joined every club
in high school, started a side business while in college and spent the
years after graduation bravely doing entrepreneurial social work across
the developing world.
This may not make you sympathetic when it comes to other people’s
failures (as everybody’s Twitter feed can attest), but it will give you
liftoff velocity in the race of life.
In your 30s and 40s, you will begin to think like a political scientist.
You’ll have a lower estimation of your own power and a greater
estimation of the power of the institutions you happen to be in.
You’ll still have faith in your own skills, but it will be more the
skills of navigation, not creation. You’ll adapt to the rules and
peculiarities of your environment. You’ll keep up with what the essayist
Joseph Epstein calls “the current snobberies.” You’ll understand that
the crucial question isn’t what you want, but what the market wants. For
a brief period, you won’t mind breakfast meetings.
Then in your 50s and 60s, you will become a sociologist, understanding
that relationships are more powerful than individuals. The higher up a
person gets, the more time that person devotes to scheduling and
personnel. As a manager, you will find yourself in the coaching phase of
life, enjoying the dreams of your underlings. Ambition, like
promiscuity, is most pleasant when experienced vicariously.
You’ll find yourself thinking back to your own mentors, newly aware of
how much they shaped your path. Even though the emotions of middle-aged
people are kind of ridiculous, you’ll get sentimental about the
relationships you benefited from and the ones you are building. Steve
Jobs said his greatest accomplishment was building a company, not a
product.
Then in your 70s and 80s, you’ll be like an ancient historian. Your mind
will bob over the decades and then back over the centuries, and you’ll
realize how deeply you were formed by the ancient traditions of your
people — being Mormon or Jewish or black or Hispanic. You’ll appreciate
how much power the dead have over the living, since this will one day be
your only power. You’ll be struck by the astonishing importance of luck
— the fact that you took this bus and not another, met this person and
not another.
In short, as maturity develops and the perspectives widen, the smaller
the power of the individual appears, and the greater the power of those
forces flowing through the individual."
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