Perhaps it is time we are honest with ourselves: not everyone is truly passionate about the work they do. What gets us out of bed each morning, what keeps us trying a little harder and enduring another long day, is often not love for the work itself, but for what it promises in return—a stable income, recognition, a sense of security, a future that looks “right.” We are passionate about the outcome, not necessarily the process.

If we look closely, work is filled with dry, repetitive moments. Days when exhaustion replaces inspiration. Times when boredom creeps in and nothing seems to move forward. In those moments, if the only thing that keeps us going is the vision of success waiting somewhere ahead, that is not passion—it is purposeful endurance. We continue because we believe the end will justify the effort.
True passion is different. It does not need to be loud or constantly fueled by excitement. Passion can be quiet. It stays with you on days when no one sees your effort. It is something you can return to every day, even when you are tired, even when you are bored, even when there is no praise or recognition. Not because it is useful, but because without it, something small yet deeply real inside you feels missing.
Passion does not have to be your full-time job. Sometimes, it is only a small corner of life: a few lines written late at night, a silent habit, something you come back to again and again without being pushed. It does not seek attention, yet it endures. And that endurance is its clearest signature.
There is nothing wrong with being passionate only about the results of your work. We all need to live, to feel safe, to find our place in the world. But there is a certain tenderness in knowing the difference between what you do to reach a destination and what you do simply because your heart chooses to stay. Because when everything falls apart, when results are still far away, it is those quiet, repeatable things—the ones you return to in silence—that will gently lift you back up.
