Prøve GULL - Gratis
Become 10 Again! (It Builds Your Brain)
Reader's Digest US
|October 2019
Want to find the key to happiness? Think about what excited you most when you were in fifth grade—and do it now.

Everyone who works at NASA or Google or SpaceX got excited about science before he or she was 10 years old,” TV host Bill “The Science Guy” Nye said recently. “This is well documented. If it isn’t 10, it’s 11 or 12. But it ain’t 17, I’ll tell you that much.”
You can plainly see the 10-year-old inside Nye, who is now 63, just as you can see the 10-year-old in anyone else who works at the junction where their deep happiness meets the world’s deep needs.
Walter Murch, the Oscar-winning film editor who likewise discovered his passion in childhood, followed a twistier—and perhaps more typical— career path than the lifelong science geeks. You can’t do kid stuff for a living, he was told—“kid stuff” in this case meaning fooling around with a friend’s dad’s tape recorder, sampling snippets of sound. He was steered toward more practical pursuits, such as engineering and oceanography. Forty-odd years later,
Murch landed in the movie business. And one day it dawned on him why this new job, film editing, felt so right: It scratched the same itch that splicing audio had all those years ago in his pal’s basement. “I was doing almost exactly what excited me most when I was 10,” he said.
Murch wondered whether he’d stumbled on a general rule: What if what we really loved doing between ages 9 and 11 is what most of us ought to be doing, somehow, for our actual job as adults? If that’s true, he thought, then our life satisfaction depends rather heavily on recalling precisely what that thing was—on remembering who we were during that unique developmental stage, where everything that’s in us shows itself for the first time.
Denne historien er fra October 2019-utgaven av Reader's Digest US.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA Reader's Digest US

Reader's Digest US
Join the Dull Men's Club?!
Finally, a meeting of the (mundane) minds. Just don't get too excited.
4 mins
August/September 2025

Reader's Digest US
LAUGHTER
THE BEST Medicine
2 mins
August/September 2025

Reader's Digest US
TRAINING TO BECOME A TEACHER
Mrs. Korthaus taught me everything I needed to know, even before I had students of my own
9 mins
August/September 2025

Reader's Digest US
ADRIFT ON AN ENDLESS SEA
WHEN THE CURRENT SWEPT NATHAN AND KIM MAKER FAR FROM THEIR DIVE BOAT, ALL THEY HAD WAS EACH OTHER
12 mins
August/September 2025
Reader's Digest US
Readers, Rejoice!
THE MOUNTAIN VILLAGE of Hobart, New York, is home to just 400 people.
1 min
August/September 2025

Reader's Digest US
HUMOR in UNIFORM
My job in the aerospace industry is often difficult to explain. Once, when chatting with a few guys, I was asked what I did for a living. Rather than get into the minutiae, I simply replied, “Defense contractor.”
1 min
August/September 2025

Reader's Digest US
THE STORY BEHIND THE STORIES
Confidence in journalism is at an all-time low. Here's what we do to get the reporting right.
9 mins
August/September 2025

Reader's Digest US
GOOD NEWS ABOUT BRAIN CANCER
An experimental new treatment makes tumors melt away
14 mins
August/September 2025
Reader's Digest US
GLAD TO HEAR IT
3 STORIES TO Make Your Day
1 mins
August/September 2025

Reader's Digest US
The Thursday Murder Club
Starring Helen Mirren, Pierce Brosnan, Ben Kingsley and Celia Imrie
1 min
August/September 2025
Translate
Change font size