In our rapidly changing, technology-driven world, traditional industry lines are beginning to blur — becoming increasingly interconnected and ever-more complex.
The nature of the workplace is changing, the nature of knowledge is changing, and the skills needed to navigate the future will be dramatically different than those past.
Most children growing up today will eventually enter jobs that do not yet exist with technologies that have not yet been invented, and this in itself presents a fascinating dilemma for modern civilization to consider.
Gone are the days where one can attend university, pass an exam, and finish with something that is education.
Henceforth, the whole of life has now become a process of learning.
Nevertheless, most will give-in and become passive participants with age — treating education, work, and self-actualization as a finished product.
The proof is etched in code on countless blogs, biographies, and LinkedIn accounts whereby individuals cast themselves as static entities that stand still with time — governed by the same batch-processed standards and myopic career titles as the next.
If you're looking for 'industry-standard' then this is not the place for you. The world is replete with normies who will meet your needs. My tolerance for ordinary has long since expired.
I am a relentlessly curious, lifelong learner, prototyping my way forward through iteration. I not only differ from others, but I also differ from myself from yesterday.
I am, quite literally, living transition.