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What Should I Do With My Life? by Po Bronson
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What Should I Do with My Life?: The True Story of People Who Answered the…

by Po Bronson

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957164,276 (3.6)15

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One of my favourite books at the moment - a thought-provoking piece of qualitative research, in which Bronson reports on interviews with a number of people about the way in which they've tried to answer this question in thier lives, and synthesises the conclusions he's drawn from these interviews in ways that are both reassuring and challenging. ( )
  seekingflight | Dec 27, 2009 |
I included this book in my book: The 100 Best Business Books of All Time. www.100bestbiz.com. ( )
  toddsattersten | May 8, 2009 |
Po Bronson's What Should I Do With My Life is a collection of stories from people who are at various stages of evaluating what their purpose in life is. This is not a how-to book or a guidebook about choosing a career. Rather, it's a bunch of stories that the reader can use (or not) to examine his or her life. Bronson has a few guiding principals - examine who sits at your inner table (who you seem to justify your actions to), and look deeply for what you most value rather than what seems to be the most exciting.

Bronson is an informal writer, which suits this topic well. I've read this once before, and for some reason I remembered it as full of "inspirational" stories. The second time through, though, I realize that at least 70% of the stories are really unresolved. Bronson really highlights that it's a process that not everyone goes through smoothly, or even finishes. It's easy to get derailed and to get sucked into what's easy. Overall, I think I appreciated this book more the second time. ( )
1 vote Talbin | Jan 17, 2009 |
I bought this one when I was at a point in my life in which I was asking the question posed in the title, read it, found it unremarkable and cheesy, then ended up selling it to a used book store. I think the appeal of this book hinges on what you're looking to get out of it. It's essentially a book of inspirational stories that will bring a smile to your face, but aren't too intellectually stimulating. If you're looking for a better collection of stories based around people talking about their jobs, try Gig: Americans Talk About Their Jobs by Bowe et al or Working: People Talk About What They Do All Day and How They Feel About What They Do by Studs Terkel. Both Terkel and Bowe do a fantastic job of letting the interviewees stories shine for themselves instead of trying a little too hard to reach for a sappy sweet moral like Bronson does. However, you might like this title if you're looking for some feel good inspiration al la the Chicken Soup series. Nothing wrong with those books or What Should I do With My Life for that matter, but they're just not to my taste ( )
1 vote Fraucopter | Dec 13, 2008 |
Despite the title ‘What Should I Do with my Life?’ is not a workbook or guide on how to decide on the right career for you in the grain of ‘What Colour is my Parachute’ and such. Therefore, if you are looking for a checklist to show you what direction to take, this is not that type of book.

What it is, however, is perhaps something more useful. Bronson has conducted a range of interviews with people who have realised that they want more out of life, and need to make the decision on how to change. Some of the subjects have made that change successfully. Some have not. Some are not even at the point where they know what they want to do. Through the different examples he gives, and discussion of his own life, Bronson gets the reader to ask the big questions of their own lives – what do I want? Do I really want that, or is it just what society/my family/my friends have lead me to believe? How do I find what I want to do with my life? How do I make it happen?

These are big questions that so many people don’t ask themselves, for a myriad of reasons. And as the essays in this book show, it sometimes takes a cataclysmic event for us to question our comfortable lives. And while this is not a workbook, it is helpful for those searching for their own paths, as common themes and strategies emerge.

It would be easy to criticise this book – as the author himself recognises, most of the examples are from the same socio-economic group, with advantages that some people could only dream of. The author himself states “I don’t think of the people in this book as the best stories out there. Rather, they’re the ones that came into my life.�? And there is as much inspiration to be found in these stories as biographies of the disadvantaged who overcame great odds to do great things. The people in this book are not exceptional – often they are quite ordinary. And that is the inspirational thing – you don’t have to be special, or exceptional to achieve momentous change. You just have to decide to do it. ( )
1 vote ForrestFamily | Nov 19, 2008 |
Page read up to: 263

Tells about how you can change your life to do better. It gives stories of real people on how they changed their lives during work or R&R. The small stories are very informative and detailed, it sounds like you are watching the story in real life.

This book has many small stories, so there is no distinct main character(s).

I stopped reading this book for now, reason: It started to get monotone "boring".

I recommend this to people only who want to have advice on how to change your life.

What i didnt like about the book is that after a while, it starts to get boring, for the reason is that it monotones the story. (Story line is "flat"). ( )
1 vote brandon-c | Oct 2, 2008 |
Excellent!! Anyone troubled by "mid-life crisis" or should I say "quarter-life crisis", its for you.
  tarun_katiyar | Sep 5, 2008 |
Something about Po's philosophies really resonates with me. He views vocations in much the way I've always viewed relationships. I've always believed that there is absolutely no point in maintaining a relationship with someone you don't think that highly of. You're not doing anyone any favors. Sure, maybe her feelings will be hurt when you break up with her, but in the long run, everyone deserves to be really loved by someone. So be honest and give her the chance to find someone who really loves her, and give yourself the chance to find someone you really love. In affairs of the heart, nothing is gained by settling.

Po seems to say that your job should be the same way, and that makes a lot of sense to me. I'm not doing anyone a favor by staying in a job I hate, even if they tell me they don't want me to leave. Because somewhere out there, as inconceivable as it is to me, someone would really enjoy this job, or at least where it could lead them. And that person will put in much more effort than I currently am. And by the same token, when I find something that really feels right to me, I'll be so much more committed to it than I am here, and that will make me a better person.

The analogy breaks down eventually, though. It's only mildly socially unacceptable to be single, but much worse to be unemployed. And single people can still pay their bills.

http://donutgirl.livejournal.com/5561...

http://donutgirl.livejournal.com/6042...

http://donutgirl.livejournal.com/1181... ( )
  george.d.ross | Jan 14, 2008 |
I know a lot of people were frustrated this because it's not really an answer book. But I loved it, found it inspiring. I'm the kind of reader who enjoys walking in another person's shoes a bit, even if I wouldn't want to live in them permanently, and this is that type of opportunity. And ultimately, no one can tell you what to do. This book just shows how other people set out to answer the question for themselves. Revelatory. ( )
  ntempest | Jun 2, 2007 |
Got this from the library. I was worried that it would be nonstop "I gave up my job as a lawyer to save orphans, and now I'm totally fulfilled!" stories. There were some of those, but not that many. In fact, most of the people in the book don't actually have it figured out. They're grappling with the question, and might see a path that could get them there, but it's not clear that the path they see is the right one, or that they're capable of taking it. As the book goes on, Bronson seems to insert his opinions about what people should do more forcefully, and I found that less and less appealing.

I'm not sure that the central question is the right one. I instinctively resist the idea that I "should" do anything with my life (and Bronson makes it clear that that's not an accidental phrasing). After reading it, I don't have a feeling that there's something that I want to be doing differently. Perhaps I'm just obstinate. Or maybe things are just going well right now. ( )
  aneel | May 10, 2007 |
Po Bronson tackles the biggest, most threatening, most obvious question that anyone has to face, 'What should I do with my life?'
Bronson's book is a fascinating account of finding and following the people who have taken the ultimate challenge of self-discovery by uprooting their lives and starting all over again. From the investment banker who gave it all up to become a catfish farmer in Mississippi, to the chemical engineer from Walthamstow who decided to become a lawyer in his sixties. These stories of individual dilemmas and dramatic -- sometimes unsuccessful -- gambles are bound up with Bronson's account of his own search for a calling.
  rajendran | Feb 20, 2007 |
interviews with people at/about personal crossroads; 4/03 ( )
  aletheia21 | Feb 9, 2007 |
The book is interesting as a collection of life-stories, but I got more and more annoyed with the author's implied worldview as I went on. The idea of financial/"conventional" success is so deeply ingrained in his thinking that it shines through as a touchstone, as what the dialogue is all about, even when he tries to say that this is not what really matters. Which makes it alien, and irritating, if you're someone who genuinely doesn't have this as their implied measure of self-worth and never had it.

Also (and he recognizes this himself in the afterword), the life-stories are overwhelmingly of people in that kind of world, corporate/financial and the commercial arts -- whether people who spent their whole life in it, or who left it, or who got into it after an unlikely start.

A book by an alien about aliens can be ethnographically fascinating, but it's not much use as a self-help book. And when it implies more universality than it is entitled to, it gets really annoying. ( )
2 vote AnnaOok | Oct 5, 2006 |
This is one of those books that you might be happier if you don't read it. It asks questions for which you may not have answers. Neither does this book so don't look for them. What this book may do is help you frame the questions so you can answer them. I liked the book and have read it twice. And yes, it has kept me awake at night trying to answer the question. ( )
  cawilliams | Sep 16, 2006 |
A fun book. Won't help you figure out what you want to do with your life, but will probably inspire you to give it some serious thought. Written as lots of short antecdotes, so it's great for reading on the train or subway. ( )
  rachelv | Jan 24, 2006 |
Questions really don’t come any bigger than “What Should I do With My Life?� but most of us probably back off from answering it too directly as we get on with the day to day business of making a living. Author Po Bronson found himself confronting the question when he found himself at a crossroads in his own life, about to become a father for the first time and not sure where his writing career was taking him. He looked around for other people who were brave enough to follow their hearts and search for deeper meaning in their lives, and travelled the length and breadth of the United States (with short trips to Britain and Hong Kong) to interview more than 900 of them. Fifty of the interviews appear in the book.

“Success� in career tends to be measured in terms of money, possessions and respect, , but real “success� says Bronson brings a person closer and closer “to finding that spot where he’s no longer held back by his heart, and he explodes with talent, and his character blossoms, and the gift he has to offer the world is apparent�. The people in the book are concerned with succeeding in these terms and most of them have made considerable sacrifices to find the place where they most belong in life. Among the people we meet in the book are: a businessman who left a privileged life to become a cop on the graveyard shift; a lawyer who made the switch to truck driver so that he could spend more time with his son; a chemist who turned to law only after his retirement; a PhD Literature student who became a chef; and an investment banker who found satisfaction in becoming a catfish farmer.

It is a tribute to Bronson’s skill as an interviewer that he is able to get these folks to bare their souls to him, and in every case, they come across as real individuals that we can identify with. The result is a highly readable book rather than dry social document. Bronson, it has to be said, is a much more intrusive interviewer than most, often pushing his subjects to think through difficult and painful issues when they seemed stalled. He also weaves bits of his personal story into the narrative: he’s learning from everyone he meets, finding new ways to approach his own life story, and this book represents his journey every bit as much as theirs.

Although the stories are all so different, patterns do emerge. For a start, there’s probably some comfort to be gained from the fact that most people’s lives are as messy and complicated as ours. Most people made mistakes before summoning the courage to get it right and often the hardest lessons need to be learned more than once. Almost no-one knew what they wanted at the beginning of their working lives (and if they thought they did, they were likely to be wrong about it) and many of the people in the book are very late starters, finding their true calling after many years of being in the wrong place. And more people stumbled by accident into a better life than those who arrived there by reasoned planning. Misfortune, whether in the form of illness, divorce or redundancy turns out to be the biggest catalyst for change, giving folks the courage to take risks and to reach out for what they’ve always wanted from life.
The book does not offer any kind of a step-by-step plan for changing our lives because each one of us must tread our own path. It does, however, provide plenty of food for thought, and is an excellent starting point for reflecting about what you want out of your own life, and how you might get there. ( )
  bibliobibuli | Nov 28, 2005 |
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