ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Emilie Wapnick - Writer, coach, artist ...
Career coach Emilie Wapnick celebrates the "multipotentialite" -- those of us with many interests, many jobs over a lifetime, and many interlocking potentials.

Why you should listen

Emilie Wapnick has been a musician/songwriter, a web designer, filmmaker, writer, law student and entrepreneur. "This is how I’ve always lived," she writes, "moving from interest to interest, building on my skills in different areas, and synthesizing the knowledge I acquire along the way."

As a career and life coach, she helps other people with wide and varied interests understand and appreciate who they are, in a society that asks us to pick a lane and stay in it. Her work with "multipotentialites" has resulted in the book Renaissance Business and the interesting website Puttylike.

Wapnick's new book, How to Be Everything: A Guide for Those Who (Still) Don't Know What They Want to Be When They Grow Up, is due out in May 2017. 

More profile about the speaker
Emilie Wapnick | Speaker | TED.com
TEDxBend

Emilie Wapnick: Why some of us don't have one true calling

Filmed:
6,976,105 views

What do you want to be when you grow up? Well, if you're not sure you want to do just one thing for the rest of your life, you're not alone. In this illuminating talk, writer and artist Emilie Wapnick describes the kind of people she calls "multipotentialites" -- who have a range of interests and jobs over one lifetime. Are you one?
- Writer, coach, artist ...
Career coach Emilie Wapnick celebrates the "multipotentialite" -- those of us with many interests, many jobs over a lifetime, and many interlocking potentials. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:12
Raise your hand if you've ever
been asked the question
0
571
2787
00:15
"What do you want to be when you grow up?"
1
3382
3000
00:18
Now if you had to guess,
2
6737
1585
00:20
how old would you say you were
when you were first asked this question?
3
8346
3417
00:23
You can just hold up fingers.
4
11787
1599
00:25
Three. Five. Three. Five. Five. OK.
5
13999
4633
00:30
Now, raise your hand if the question
6
18656
4676
00:35
"What do you want to be when you grow up?"
7
23356
2022
00:37
has ever caused you any anxiety.
8
25402
2530
00:39
(Laughter)
9
27956
1630
00:41
Any anxiety at all.
10
29610
2222
00:45
I'm someone who's never
been able to answer the question
11
33342
2633
00:47
"What do you want to be when you grow up?"
12
35999
2290
00:50
See, the problem wasn't
that I didn't have any interests --
13
38313
3436
00:53
it's that I had too many.
14
41773
2202
00:55
In high school, I liked English
and math and art and I built websites
15
43999
4451
01:00
and I played guitar in a punk band
called Frustrated Telephone Operator.
16
48474
4336
01:04
Maybe you've heard of us.
17
52834
2141
01:06
(Laughter)
18
54999
2300
01:09
This continued after high school,
19
57323
1905
01:11
and at a certain point, I began
to notice this pattern in myself
20
59252
4408
01:15
where I would become interested in an area
21
63684
2553
01:18
and I would dive in, become all-consumed,
22
66261
3159
01:21
and I'd get to be pretty good
at whatever it was,
23
69444
3531
01:24
and then I would hit this point
where I'd start to get bored.
24
72999
4602
01:30
And usually I would try
and persist anyway,
25
78046
2776
01:32
because I had already devoted
so much time and energy
26
80846
2897
01:35
and sometimes money into this field.
27
83767
2496
01:38
But eventually this sense of boredom,
28
86287
2303
01:40
this feeling of, like, yeah, I got this,
this isn't challenging anymore --
29
88614
4780
01:45
it would get to be too much.
30
93418
1635
01:47
And I would have to let it go.
31
95751
1659
01:50
But then I would become interested
in something else,
32
98262
2501
01:52
something totally unrelated,
and I would dive into that,
33
100787
3188
01:55
and become all-consumed,
and I'd be like, "Yes! I found my thing,"
34
103999
4262
02:00
and then I would hit this point again
where I'd start to get bored.
35
108285
4297
02:05
And eventually, I would let it go.
36
113352
2795
02:09
But then I would discover
something new and totally different,
37
117106
3068
02:12
and I would dive into that.
38
120198
1571
02:15
This pattern caused me a lot of anxiety,
39
123103
3739
02:18
for two reasons.
40
126866
1182
02:20
The first was that I wasn't sure
41
128460
2832
02:23
how I was going to turn
any of this into a career.
42
131316
3013
02:26
I thought that I would eventually
have to pick one thing,
43
134353
2798
02:29
deny all of my other passions,
44
137175
2214
02:31
and just resign myself to being bored.
45
139413
3396
02:35
The other reason it caused me
so much anxiety
46
143595
2319
02:37
was a little bit more personal.
47
145938
1634
02:40
I worried that there
was something wrong with this,
48
148230
2718
02:42
and something wrong with me
for being unable to stick with anything.
49
150972
4118
02:47
I worried that I was afraid of commitment,
50
155677
2387
02:50
or that I was scattered,
or that I was self-sabotaging,
51
158088
3461
02:53
afraid of my own success.
52
161573
1666
02:57
If you can relate to my story
and to these feelings,
53
165261
3714
03:00
I'd like you to ask yourself a question
54
168999
2274
03:03
that I wish I had asked myself back then.
55
171297
2586
03:06
Ask yourself where you learned to assign
the meaning of wrong or abnormal
56
174796
5426
03:12
to doing many things.
57
180246
1821
03:15
I'll tell you where you learned it:
58
183741
1739
03:17
you learned it from the culture.
59
185504
2086
03:22
We are first asked the question
"What do you want to be when you grow up?"
60
190074
3791
03:25
when we're about five years old.
61
193889
1568
03:27
And the truth is that no one really cares
what you say when you're that age.
62
195481
3693
03:31
(Laughter)
63
199198
1001
03:32
It's considered an innocuous question,
64
200223
2375
03:34
posed to little kids
to elicit cute replies,
65
202622
2360
03:37
like, "I want to be an astronaut,"
or "I want to be a ballerina,"
66
205006
3673
03:40
or "I want to be a pirate."
67
208703
1883
03:42
Insert Halloween costume here.
68
210610
1950
03:44
(Laughter)
69
212584
1511
03:46
But this question gets asked of us
again and again as we get older
70
214119
4412
03:50
in various forms -- for instance,
high school students might get asked
71
218555
3877
03:54
what major they're going
to pick in college.
72
222456
2227
03:57
And at some point,
73
225088
1882
03:58
"What do you want to be when you grow up?"
74
226994
2028
04:01
goes from being
the cute exercise it once was
75
229046
3358
04:04
to the thing that keeps us up at night.
76
232428
2272
04:07
Why?
77
235137
1150
04:09
See, while this question inspires kids
to dream about what they could be,
78
237049
5445
04:14
it does not inspire them to dream
about all that they could be.
79
242518
3412
04:17
In fact, it does just the opposite,
80
245954
2398
04:20
because when someone asks you
what you want to be,
81
248376
3016
04:23
you can't reply with 20 different things,
82
251416
2796
04:26
though well-meaning adults
will likely chuckle and be like,
83
254236
2895
04:29
"Oh, how cute, but you can't be
a violin maker and a psychologist.
84
257155
4052
04:33
You have to choose."
85
261231
1803
04:36
This is Dr. Bob Childs --
86
264105
1769
04:37
(Laughter)
87
265898
3077
04:40
and he's a luthier and psychotherapist.
88
268999
2900
04:44
And this is Amy Ng, a magazine editor
turned illustrator, entrepreneur,
89
272835
4289
04:49
teacher and creative director.
90
277148
1947
04:51
But most kids don't hear
about people like this.
91
279119
2706
04:53
All they hear
92
281849
2126
04:55
is that they're going to have to choose.
93
283999
2300
04:59
But it's more than that.
94
287418
1961
05:01
The notion of the narrowly focused life
95
289403
2992
05:04
is highly romanticized in our culture.
96
292419
2372
05:07
It's this idea of destiny
or the one true calling,
97
295218
4180
05:11
the idea that we each have one great thing
98
299422
2757
05:14
we are meant to do
during our time on this earth,
99
302203
2333
05:16
and you need to figure out
what that thing is
100
304560
2883
05:19
and devote your life to it.
101
307467
2485
05:23
But what if you're someone
who isn't wired this way?
102
311135
3111
05:26
What if there are a lot of different
subjects that you're curious about,
103
314999
3405
05:30
and many different things you want to do?
104
318428
2025
05:33
Well, there is no room for someone
like you in this framework.
105
321246
3877
05:37
And so you might feel alone.
106
325814
1971
05:40
You might feel like you don't
have a purpose.
107
328412
2213
05:43
And you might feel like
there's something wrong with you.
108
331017
2685
05:46
There's nothing wrong with you.
109
334758
1722
05:48
What you are is a multipotentialite.
110
336908
3593
05:52
(Laughter)
111
340525
2450
05:54
(Applause)
112
342999
6965
06:02
A multipotentialite is someone
with many interests and creative pursuits.
113
350312
4953
06:07
It's a mouthful to say.
114
355852
1946
06:09
It might help if you break it up
into three parts:
115
357822
2850
06:12
multi, potential, and ite.
116
360696
3992
06:16
You can also use one of the other terms
that connote the same idea,
117
364712
3220
06:19
such as polymath, the Renaissance person.
118
367956
2966
06:22
Actually, during the Renaissance period,
119
370946
1944
06:24
it was considered the ideal
to be well-versed in multiple disciplines.
120
372914
3659
06:29
Barbara Sher refers to us as "scanners."
121
377026
2607
06:32
Use whichever term you like,
or invent your own.
122
380214
3223
06:35
I have to say I find it sort of fitting
that as a community,
123
383461
3055
06:38
we cannot agree on a single identity.
124
386540
2462
06:41
(Laughter)
125
389026
2000
06:45
It's easy to see your multipotentiality
126
393017
2397
06:47
as a limitation or an affliction
that you need to overcome.
127
395438
3913
06:51
But what I've learned
through speaking with people
128
399375
2393
06:53
and writing about these
ideas on my website,
129
401792
2468
06:56
is that there are some tremendous
strengths to being this way.
130
404284
4451
07:01
Here are three
131
409656
1961
07:03
multipotentialite super powers.
132
411641
2885
07:07
One: idea synthesis.
133
415384
3176
07:10
That is, combining two or more fields
134
418584
2693
07:13
and creating something new
at the intersection.
135
421301
2666
07:17
Sha Hwang and Rachel Binx drew
from their shared interests
136
425633
3266
07:20
in cartography, data visualization,
travel, mathematics and design,
137
428923
5496
07:26
when they founded Meshu.
138
434443
1620
07:28
Meshu is a company that creates
custom geographically-inspired jewelry.
139
436999
5672
07:35
Sha and Rachel came up
with this unique idea
140
443409
2426
07:37
not despite, but because of their eclectic
mix of skills and experiences.
141
445859
5750
07:45
Innovation happens at the intersections.
142
453077
3259
07:48
That's where the new ideas come from.
143
456797
2111
07:51
And multipotentialites,
with all of their backgrounds,
144
459519
3159
07:54
are able to access a lot of these
points of intersection.
145
462702
3535
07:59
The second multipotentialite superpower
146
467999
3072
08:03
is rapid learning.
147
471095
1491
08:05
When multipotentialites
become interested in something,
148
473404
2862
08:08
we go hard.
149
476290
2055
08:10
We observe everything
we can get our hands on.
150
478369
2771
08:13
We're also used to being beginners,
151
481164
1743
08:14
because we've been beginners
so many times in the past,
152
482931
3122
08:18
and this means that we're less afraid
of trying new things
153
486077
3279
08:21
and stepping out of our comfort zones.
154
489380
2382
08:23
What's more, many skills
are transferable across disciplines,
155
491786
4029
08:27
and we bring everything we've learned
to every new area we pursue,
156
495839
3855
08:31
so we're rarely starting from scratch.
157
499718
2293
08:34
Nora Dunn is a full-time traveler
and freelance writer.
158
502971
3626
08:39
As a child concert pianist,
she honed an incredible ability
159
507121
3807
08:42
to develop muscle memory.
160
510952
1705
08:45
Now, she's the fastest typist she knows.
161
513070
2740
08:47
(Laughter)
162
515834
1464
08:49
Before becoming a writer,
Nora was a financial planner.
163
517322
3237
08:52
She had to learn
the finer mechanics of sales
164
520583
2206
08:54
when she was starting her practice,
165
522813
1746
08:56
and this skill now helps her
write compelling pitches to editors.
166
524583
3969
09:01
It is rarely a waste of time
to pursue something you're drawn to,
167
529727
3870
09:05
even if you end up quitting.
168
533621
1690
09:07
You might apply that knowledge
in a different field entirely,
169
535335
3304
09:10
in a way that you couldn't
have anticipated.
170
538663
2607
09:14
The third multipotentialite superpower
171
542643
2771
09:17
is adaptability;
172
545438
1847
09:19
that is, the ability to morph
into whatever you need to be
173
547309
3543
09:22
in a given situation.
174
550876
1776
09:26
Abe Cajudo is sometimes a video director,
sometimes a web designer,
175
554295
4891
09:31
sometimes a Kickstarter consultant,
sometimes a teacher,
176
559210
3713
09:34
and sometimes, apparently, James Bond.
177
562947
2391
09:37
(Laughter)
178
565362
1690
09:39
He's valuable because he does good work.
179
567076
2468
09:41
He's even more valuable
because he can take on various roles,
180
569568
3261
09:44
depending on his clients' needs.
181
572853
2162
09:47
Fast Company magazine
identified adaptability
182
575737
3238
09:50
as the single most important skill
to develop in order to thrive
183
578999
3355
09:54
in the 21st century.
184
582378
1652
09:56
The economic world is changing
so quickly and unpredictably
185
584808
3215
10:00
that it is the individuals
and organizations that can pivot
186
588047
3771
10:03
in order to meet the needs of the market
that are really going to thrive.
187
591842
3932
10:09
Idea synthesis, rapid learning
and adaptability:
188
597615
4291
10:13
three skills that multipotentialites
are very adept at,
189
601930
3923
10:17
and three skills that they might lose
if pressured to narrow their focus.
190
605877
4526
10:25
As a society, we have a vested interest
in encouraging multipotentialites
191
613181
4456
10:29
to be themselves.
192
617661
1674
10:32
We have a lot of complex, multidimensional
problems in the world right now,
193
620073
3927
10:36
and we need creative,
out-of-the-box thinkers to tackle them.
194
624024
3777
10:41
Now, let's say that you are,
in your heart, a specialist.
195
629810
4664
10:46
You came out of the womb knowing
you wanted to be a pediatric neurosurgeon.
196
634498
4421
10:51
Don't worry -- there's nothing
wrong with you, either.
197
639879
2815
10:54
(Laughter)
198
642718
1040
10:55
In fact, some of the best teams
are comprised of a specialist
199
643782
3043
10:58
and multipotentialite paired together.
200
646849
2607
11:01
The specialist can dive in deep
and implement ideas,
201
649480
3034
11:04
while the multipotentialite brings
a breadth of knowledge to the project.
202
652538
3602
11:08
It's a beautiful partnership.
203
656164
1902
11:11
But we should all be designing
lives and careers
204
659066
2469
11:13
that are aligned with how we're wired.
205
661559
2509
11:16
And sadly, multipotentialites
are largely being encouraged
206
664092
4418
11:20
simply to be more
like their specialist peers.
207
668534
3008
11:24
So with that said,
208
672621
2479
11:27
if there is one thing
you take away from this talk,
209
675124
3071
11:30
I hope that it is this:
210
678219
3098
11:33
embrace your inner wiring,
whatever that may be.
211
681341
3362
11:37
If you're a specialist at heart,
212
685687
2168
11:39
then by all means, specialize.
213
687879
1999
11:41
That is where you'll do your best work.
214
689902
2197
11:44
But to the multipotentialites in the room,
215
692624
2980
11:47
including those of you
who may have just realized
216
695628
2317
11:49
in the last 12 minutes that you are one --
217
697969
2016
11:52
(Laughter)
218
700009
1605
11:53
to you I say:
219
701638
2152
11:55
embrace your many passions.
220
703814
2102
11:58
Follow your curiosity
down those rabbit holes.
221
706614
3283
12:02
Explore your intersections.
222
710643
2024
12:06
Embracing our inner wiring leads
to a happier, more authentic life.
223
714264
4762
12:12
And perhaps more importantly --
224
720028
2717
12:14
multipotentialites, the world needs us.
225
722769
3799
12:19
Thank you.
226
727852
1161
12:21
(Applause)
227
729037
2693

▲Back to top

ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Emilie Wapnick - Writer, coach, artist ...
Career coach Emilie Wapnick celebrates the "multipotentialite" -- those of us with many interests, many jobs over a lifetime, and many interlocking potentials.

Why you should listen

Emilie Wapnick has been a musician/songwriter, a web designer, filmmaker, writer, law student and entrepreneur. "This is how I’ve always lived," she writes, "moving from interest to interest, building on my skills in different areas, and synthesizing the knowledge I acquire along the way."

As a career and life coach, she helps other people with wide and varied interests understand and appreciate who they are, in a society that asks us to pick a lane and stay in it. Her work with "multipotentialites" has resulted in the book Renaissance Business and the interesting website Puttylike.

Wapnick's new book, How to Be Everything: A Guide for Those Who (Still) Don't Know What They Want to Be When They Grow Up, is due out in May 2017. 

More profile about the speaker
Emilie Wapnick | Speaker | TED.com

Data provided by TED.

This site was created in May 2015 and the last update was on January 12, 2020. It will no longer be updated.

We are currently creating a new site called "eng.lish.video" and would be grateful if you could access it.

If you have any questions or suggestions, please feel free to write comments in your language on the contact form.

Privacy Policy

Developer's Blog

Buy Me A Coffee