First of all let's say money or difficulty isn't an issue
How do I know if I want to do one thing with my life vs another
Random example but say I wanted to be a film director a lawyer or design clothes, how would you go about figuring out which one to do
money and difficulty are always issues.
How do you know what you want to do? Fuck man, do something relative and see if you like it!
You want to be a film director, get a bitch boy job serving coffee so you can see what it's about.
Entry level jobs for what you want is where it's at! They pay garbage, but experience is priceless.
Generally, people will enjoy things they are successful at. Of those three things, given you have a lot money, the safest bet is lawyer. Go to college, work hard, pay your way through a fancy law school, boom you're a good lawyer. The other two depend on how skilled you are, unless you are fantastically rich, you can't just buy success in making movies or clothes designing. But may be you are fantastically rich.
>>18053726
If resources were not a limiting factor (which they always are, but we will ignore that) why not just try everything? Do a little of each thing that sounds cool or fun or manageable to you and see if something really gets you excited.
I know that hard work seems like a lot of work for a millenial such as yourself but that is the only way to truly know what you want to do.
I started as a major in teaching. I ended up on the board of a fortune 500 company. I made it here by trying things out and seeing what I was best at.
>>18053884
>I know that hard work seems like a lot of work for a millenial such as yourself
???
Everyone else thank you