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Beyond passion and pressure: Career as clarity
The Sunday Guardian
|November 23, 2025
Students struggle between passion and pressure while clarity offers deeper direction.
Across campuses today, a striking pattern keeps appearing. Classrooms tense with placement anxiety, universities buzzing with talk of “dream jobs,” coaching hubs where the glow of fluorescent tubes replaces daylight and adolescence is spent in the shadow of ranking charts. The cities differ, the institutions differ, yet the questions being raised sound remarkably similar.
And beneath these questions, a quiet desperation: the sense that life’s most important decision is being made without real understanding.
Young people speak of passion in one breath and pressure in the next. Their voices rise when they describe what they genuinely enjoy, then lower when the discussion turns to money, safety or what is considered “sensible.” A quiet tug-of-war unfolds within. One movement arises from sincerity, another from fear of falling behind. One side pulls toward exploration, the other toward conformity. Caught between these impulses, the mind gradually loses touch with its own centre.
Somewhere in this conflict, effort undergoes an unnoticed shift. What begins as a relationship with a subject becomes a performance for an audience. The freshness that naturally belongs to youth becomes buried under calculations of stability, acceptability or prestige. The inner impulse to explore is steadily replaced by the outer demand to comply.
It is in this backdrop that the contrast of passion versus pressure emerges. One is praised as liberation, the other as discipline. Yet both often arise from the same root. One springs from desire, the other from fear. Neither necessarily leads to understanding. When examined with a bit more attentiveness, the entire debate appears too shallow to capture the real movements of the mind. Something more fundamental is needed, something capable of cutting through both excitement and anxiety.
A deeper question quietly asks itself: If passion is unreliable and pressure is limiting, what remains to guide the mind?
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