The video "I don't know what I want to do" went viral—The #1 registration conversion rate revealed the true suffering of modern people.
Recently, I published a video on YouTube titled "To Those Who Don't Know What They Want to Do."
I uploaded the video thinking it was just another normal video, but the reaction was more than I expected. Honestly, I didn't think it would get this much attention. Within a few days of its release, my subscriber count increased at a tremendous rate. Among all the videos I've released so far, this one had the highest subscriber engagement rate by far.
This means that far more people than you can imagine feel that they don't know what they want to do.
- This was the most common concern during the national tour as well.
- Not knowing what you want to do is the price of education.
- In the AI era, people who don't know what they want to do will be the most disadvantaged.
- In the video, we'll reveal the entire "restoration process" so you can understand what needs to be done.
This was the most common concern during the national tour as well.
When I return to Japan, I always hold events all over the country to give as many people as possible a direct experience of being a village elder. I also have opportunities to talk with local people at these events, and the most common concern I hear, regardless of age or profession, is a single phrase.
I don't know what I want to do.
People in their 20s, 30s, 40s, 50s, even 60s, regardless of their title or background, quite a few of them say this. And almost all of them believe it's "their own problem."
But I want to be clear about one thing. It's not your fault that you don't know what you want to do. This isn't a matter of individual ability; it's a structural problem.
Not knowing what you want to do is the price of education.
The compulsory education we have received is well done. By absorbing knowledge comprehensively as fundamental culture, it sketches the contours of humanity, and confines thought and action within a certain framework. And finally, it completes and ships us out as soldiers of capitalism.
Accurately perform assigned tasks. Operate according to manuals. Reproduce set correct answers. This is refined over 12 to 16 years, polished carefully, and then further honed in society.
It's impossible to tell someone who has lived in such a structure for 20, 30, or 40 years to "find something they want to do" all of a sudden. The fact is, they've never used those neural pathways before.
Not knowing what you want to do doesn't mean you lack ability. It just means you're left untreated for a condition that needs rehabilitation, without anyone teaching you how.
AIIn this era, those who don't know what they want to do are at the greatest disadvantage.
Here, another structural change is superimposed: AI.
Up until now, I've been able to make a living doing "things I should do," even if I didn't have anything I *wanted* to do. Completing assigned tasks, replicating manuals, memorizing correct answers—all of these could be converted into salary. As a result, those "things I should do" automatically transformed into "things I want to do."
However, in the AI era, all of these will be replaced by AI. All that will be left are the things you "want to do." The ability to ask questions. The ability to create meaning. The ability to act on your own motivation.
The very structures that have allowed people to accept "not knowing what they want to do" are being dismantled by AI. Those who don't have a "what they want to do" will be at a significant disadvantage in the coming era.
The real reason the video went viral is probably this. Many people are unconsciously starting to feel this change.
In the video, we'll reveal the entire "restoration process" so you can understand what needs to be done.
The video talks about specific prescriptions for such people.
Why can't you find what you want to do through introspection? Why can talents only be activated by their environment? How do you re-tune your sensory antenna? How do you integrate scattered interests into a single "individuality"?
And ultimately, why should we reclaim "innocence" instead of "grand goals"?
If something has bothered you as you've read this far, please check out the video. It's not your fault that you don't know what you want to do. You just haven't been taught the steps to get it back yet.
↓If you don't know what you want to do, check out this YouTube video right now↓
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