• What Can I Do When I Grow Up
  • What Can I Do When I Grow Up
  • What Can I Do When I Grow Up
  • What Can I Do When I Grow Up
  • What Can I Do When I Grow Up

What Can I Do When I Grow Up

The School of Life

Regular price € 20,17
  • Buy now Pay later – with Klarna
  • Free Shipping – > €60 NL & starting at €100 EU
  • Return & Exchange – 30 Days no fuss
  • Shop Tax Free – Non EU Residents
  • Gift Wrap – Leave us a note & we'll wrap it up
Description
This book about how to find out what you want to in life is written for children 10 years and older, but we at Misc feel it is very well written for parents too. In that sense it is very insightful to learn about the reference world of their child...
This book about how to find out what you want to in life is written for children 10 years and older, but we at Misc feel it is very well written for parents too. In that sense it is very insightful to learn about the reference world of their child and what words to use.

This book is a young person’s guide to careers, money - and the future.

What Can I Do When I Grow Up is a book about the world of work written expressly for young people. It takes us on a journey around the most essential questions within the topic, such as:

• How can I discover my passions?
• What should a 'good' job involve?
• How much money should I make?
• How does the economy work?

The result is a book that will spark exceptionally fruitful conversations and help you look forward to your work life with positivity and anticipation.

Details


Measures 22.7 x 16 cm
Counts 175 pages
Includes excercises per chapter

Extracts from the Book:

Why it’s hard to know what you want to do

“A big difficulty in all this is that our brains are not very good at telling us what would make us happy. We know quickly enough when there is a problem, but that’s different from knowing what we need to do to feel content.”

What is a job?

“The real reason you can get money for working is this: People pay money because they have a problem that they cannot solve on their own. They need someone else to help them - someone they generally do not know and who can’t just do it as a ‘favour’ - and they have to hand over some cash in exchange for their assistance.”

What do you really enjoy?

“Thinking about pleasure is central to achieving a good working life. This idea sounds odd only because schools almost never think about fun. Fun does not come into it around school work: you’re meant to suffer - or so it can seem on a bad day. However, your ability to do your job properly as an adult is going to depend on you getting a good sense of what actually brings you joy and then finding a job that matches.”

Following EU regulations, from July 1st 2021 online shops must charge customers the VAT % from their home country.

All prices are shown including 21% (NL VAT rate); if your country’s VAT rate different, the prices will change accordingly during checkout.

EXAMPLE
Postalco One Year Wall Calendar €20
- will be €19,67 for a customer from Germany, as the German VAT rate is 19%
- will be €20,67 for a customer from Denmark, as the Danish VAT rate is 25%

For US & UK residents; the prices will be shown in your local currency and excluding VAT.

For all other non EU residents:
Prices are shown in € and including VAT. VAT will automatically be deducted during checkout based on your shipping address.

PLEASE NOTE

- Deduction (other than $/£) only happens after your shipping address has been filled out.

- Do not use any of the Express Checkout buttons in the cart (Paypal, Apple Pay or Shop Pay):

This skips the checkout process & therefor the VAT cannot be deducted by the system.

IMPORT FEES ARE THE SOLE RESPONSIBILITY OF THE BUYER.

About The School of Life

The School of Life at Misc-store Amsterdam

Alain de Botton founded The School of Life in 2008. His aim was to make philosophy — long seen as the inaccessible, inauthentic stuff of academies and archives — a functional aspect of modern life. The care with which ancient philosophers thought about their lives remains a valuable antidote to the generalised anxiety of our era.

The school thus posits that ideas of Plato, Aristotle and the Stoics are as relevant to us today as they were in ancient Greece. Even if Epicurus never had social media burnout, understanding his thinking can lead us to a healthier relationship with , for example, our phones — and by extension, with one another.

We began stocking The School of Life’s series on work, gratitude and pleasure as a way of thinking through modern day issues. We admire their series for the capacity to stimulate reflection, and their ability to give a new perspective on age old problems. At its core, it is a set of strategies for finding meaning in the modern world — so that we can appreciate small pleasures and the things that might go unnoticed.