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Baseball and Demogorgons: How to Find Passion in Your Career

Peter Gasca
3 min readJan 13, 2019
Photo by Bahram Jamalov from Pexels

Finding passion in our work is a misleading premise. Instead, understand and focus on your personal strengths, which ultimately will lead to work that you enjoy.

What do Cody Bellinger, center fielder for the Los Angeles Dodgers, and a low-level cleric with the propensity for healing have in common? Both are positions I would hold today if I had held out and pursued my “passions” as a youth.

All our lives, we are told to focus on activities or ideals that bring passion to our work, with the idea that passion is at the root of a successful career or profession. That is all fine, but the problem for me was that I could never effectively hit a curve ball and seating up with a table full of D&D characters hardly paid my bills.

So how do we square our passions with finding meaningful work that still provides a means of sustenance?

Recently, I had the opportunity to be part of a leadership institute that promotes a strengths finding program called CliftonStrengths. It is a practice of identifying core strengths and understanding how to apply them to find a career for which we are best suited.

CliftonStrengths is an assessment developed by Don Clifton, the former chairman of Gallup, an organization that uses data and insights to help organizations…

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Peter Gasca
Peter Gasca

Written by Peter Gasca

Consultant, Entrepreneur, Fitness Nut, Writer, Dad.

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