\\\"Follow your passion\\\" is the most repeated career advice of the last fifty years, and one of the most expensive — it tells you to wait for a feeling that was never how great work begins. This course replaces the myth with a single, durable model: your career is a capital account. You build a balance of rare, valuable skill through deliberate practice, then you spend it on the things people actually want — control over your work, and eventually a mission. Across seven short lessons — drawing on So Good They Can't Ignore You, the science of deliberate practice, self-determination theory, and the research on how interests actually develop — you'll learn why passion follows mastery rather than preceding it, how to make a deposit instead of just reading the balance, and when you've earned the right to spend. You'll leave with The Career-Capital Audit, a one-page check you can re-run for the rest of your working life, so the next time the quit-and-chase itch hits you act on a balance reading instead of a mood.
Follow your passion. It is the most repeated career advice of the last fifty years. It is also one of the most expensive.
The script is simple. Somewhere out there is the work you were built for. Find it, match yourself to it, and the effort takes care of itself. So you wait for the feeling. You read the job like a critic, asking whether it is good enough for you. And when the feeling does not arrive on schedule, you assume you are in the wrong place and start looking again.
There is a better way to think about a career, and it looks less like a treasure hunt and more like a bank account. You build a balance of rare, valuable skill. That balance has a name — career capital. And like any balance, you build it before you spend it.
This course swaps the passion myth for the account. It draws on four sources that point the same direction: Cal Newport's case that skill comes before passion, the research on deliberate practice that explains how skill is actually built, self-determination theory on why control matters so much, and the studies showing that interests are developed, not discovered. Each lesson names a belief you have probably absorbed, takes it apart with something specific, and rebuilds it into a move you can make this week.
You will see why the lightning bolt never comes, why the craftsman beats the passion-chaser, what separates practice that compounds from practice that plateaus, and what your capital is actually for once you have it — first control, then, much later, a mission.
What you walk away with is The Career-Capital Audit: one page, five questions, answerable in ten minutes and re-answerable for the rest of your working life. It tells you what is in the account, whether you are still filling it, what you are saving up to buy, and whether you can afford it yet. Stop waiting to be struck. Get good first. The rest is something you buy.
7 lessons to get you from zero to confident. Start at your own pace.