I recently sat down with a mid-career HispanicLatino who wanted my advice about where he stood in his professional life. At the age of 35, he is in a job that he sort of likes, but not really. I asked him if he had other interests than his job and, of course, as I feared, he responded energetically with a list of activities related to entertainment and sports.
This is a reasonably young man who had he had better schooling and better counselors should have his own medical practice. But he spends his truly invaluable time seemingly irrationally – a product of the kind of neglect that seems to be a societal curse these days for even the brightest of HispanicLatinos. By the time they mature and are ready to raise families, young men and women such as these who remain unfocused end up underperforming for themselves and for the country as a whole. But perhaps there is madness in their method. Continue reading