Friends #13 & #14
This past Sunday, I attended an inspiring talk at ASU about
the Power of Passion. It’s an
interesting topic and as I listened to each speaker, I realized living life is
my passion. You never know what it’s
going to bring! In the past, I have felt
sorry for the generations that come behind me. So many people talk about how the millennials
and generation z are failing. I’ve read
articles about how technology has not prepared these generations for hard work…or
life, in general. It’s as if these
generations lack passion. And then, when
I least expect it, my job takes me a direction that allows me to meet people in
their twenties who have learned to harness their passion and succeed.
Unfortunately, both of these people I’ve had the privilege
to get to know live in the public eye, so to keep them anonymous I am going to
call them ‘Ann’ and ‘Andy’.
‘Ann’ is a twenty-eight-year-old real estate agent. She was on her way to get her master’s degree
when she took a summer job working for a real estate company and just fell in
love with it. Suddenly her focus changed
and she couldn’t see herself doing anything outside of real estate. One of ‘Ann’s’ other passions is hiking. Late last year, ‘Ann’ heard about a special
interest group that was looking to use money marked for sustaining the preserve
she loved to build a tourist attraction right in the middle of protected
land. Not only would the attraction be
an eye soar for nature lovers but it would also, in essence, bankrupt the fund that has been keeping the land preserved. ‘Ann’ was
outraged! So she decided to do
something. She began working with a group
lobbying to keep the attraction from coming to fruition and that’s when ‘Ann’
began to notice, she was, by far, the youngest person in the room.
She began to notice that people her own age weren’t paying
attention. They would wave her off when
she asked them to sign a petition. They
never wanted to listen when she tried to instill the importance of her
fight. It bothered her so much that ‘Ann’
decided she wanted to do something about it…so she decided to make herself an
example. She decided to run for
political office. More important than getting
elected is her desire to save the preserve she loves and to encourage other
people her age to live their most passionate lives by changing the world around
them.
I’d like to call ‘Ann’ a revolutionary but just before I met
her, I was fortunate enough to have a drink with another millennial setting the
world on fire.
‘Andy’ readily admits he always wanted to be on a platform. But
how do you get that job? After graduating
from college, he worked a bunch of low-paying odd jobs, none of which was even
close to the spotlight. In fact, he was
working in a call center when someone asked him if he’d heard about the contest
a local radio station was running to compete for the chance to become an on-air personality. ‘Andy’ had no idea what they were
talking about, but he went home and looked it up.
To qualify, a contestant first had to submit a video. So ‘Andy’
uploaded his video to the station two days before the deadline and got a call
to come in and audition. He just knew
this was his big break, but when he got to the studio, he realized he was among
a large group of contestants. The
afternoon DJ, was checking in each contestant as they arrived. Star struck, ‘Andy’ said, “Oooh…I love your
hair!” which was pink.
The woman scowled as if ‘Andy’ had just insulted her. “What do you mean by that?”
“Oooh…uh…just that I like your hair,” he said wilting under the
woman’s glare. She checked him in and ‘Andy’
went to the back of the room. He put his
back to the wall and slid down to the floor, certain he had just blown his
shot. When they called him up to try
out, he auditioned and then he went home.
Three weeks after the audition, the station’s programming
director called ‘Andy’ asking him if he wanted to sit in on the morning show
for a week trial. There was just one
problem: ‘Andy’ had a full time job and
no vacation time.
He thought about calling in sick but he knew someone would
hear him on the radio and rat him out.
So he came clean, told his employer what was going on and they agreed to
let him temporarily work the night shift.
Morning radio begins EARLY so ‘Andy’ needed to be in the studio by 5
AM. He would work his shift at the radio
station, be at his call center job by 2 PM, leave work at 10 PM only to go home
and try to get a little sleep.
By
midweek, the station decided they wanted him on the air permanently…but there
was a catch. They could only hire him as
part time. For a while, ‘Andy’ kept up
the impossible schedule of having two jobs until he just couldn’t function any
longer. After three months, he put in
his resignation at the call center and lived on a part-time wage. As ‘Andy’s’ star began to rise, he was
actually living in poverty. He couldn’t
afford to go anywhere so he spent most of his free time alone and
depressed. He used up his entire savings
during his first year in radio and just when he felt like it was about to break
him, the station decided to hire him full time.
Today, you can hear ‘Andy’ on the radio every morning. He
has become a highly popular figure and has been an inspiration to a number of
young people. And as he grows his
following, the sky really is the limit but it couldn’t have happened without
hard work and a passion to succeed.
Neither ‘Ann’ nor ‘Andy’ really wanted me to tell their
stories. This wasn’t my typical ‘friend’
setup. But each of these individuals was
so inspiring to me, that I simply could not just idly let these stories
sit. I think it is important for
millennials and generation z to realize the world is changing, leaders are
emerging and because of them, the world will one day be a better place than the
way my generation left it.
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