Why "follow your passion" is bad advice for a good decision
Passion is a poor compass for irreversible choices. Here's what to consult instead.
Nobody Taught Us How exists for the moments no syllabus covers: leaving the safe path, splitting the equity, taking the board seat, ending the partnership. We help ambitious people build the judgment those moments require.
Somewhere between graduation and the corner office, ambitious people run out of instructions. The technical skills keep compounding: the strategy frameworks, the modeling, the market fluency. But the decisions that actually determine the shape of a life arrive with no case study attached. Do you take the founder role or the safe promotion. Do you confront your co-founder or wait for the cap table to force the conversation. Do you say yes to the board seat that will consume every Sunday for three years.
These aren't questions of information. Most people deciding them are already the smartest person in the room. They're questions of judgment: how to weigh what can't be measured, how to move under real uncertainty, how to choose and then live inside the choice. Nobody taught us how. We think that's the actual curriculum missing from ambitious careers, and we built a practice around teaching it.
Separate what's reversible from what isn't. Most anxiety about a decision comes from treating a two-way door like a one-way one.
Surface the options you haven't let yourself consider: the third path between "stay" and "go" that ambition tends to hide from view.
Put a number, or at minimum a rank, on what you're giving up. Vague regret becomes a legible cost you can actually weigh.
Commit in writing, with a date to revisit it. A decision without a record is just a mood you'll have to have again.
Good judgment is a discipline, not a personality trait. It can be built, examined, and taught, which means the fact that nobody taught you is a solvable problem, not a permanent deficit.The founding thesis of Nobody Taught Us How
Passion is a poor compass for irreversible choices. Here's what to consult instead.
The founding split gets decided by momentum, not agreement, unless you interrupt it on purpose.
The hardest exits are the ones with no villain, just a ceiling you can finally see.
Not a webinar, not a cohort. A working session built around the actual decision in front of you. The offer, the exit, the partnership, the split. We help you frame it, price it, and decide.