Career Testing for People Who Have Too Many Interests
Do you have a list of potential dream jobs that’s longer than your arm? The pressure to “find your one true calling” feels impossible when you have twenty. Here's how to find a path without feeling trapped.
By Tony Musso on
Do you have a list of potential dream jobs that’s longer than your arm? One day you’re diving deep into coding tutorials, the next you’re sketching out a business plan for a sustainable cafe, and by the weekend you’re learning how to arrange flowers professionally. Your friends lovingly call you a Jack-of-all-trades, but secretly, you feel a bit of a mess. The pressure to “find your one true calling” feels impossible when you have twenty. If you have ever felt overwhelmed by your own curiosity, you can learn how to [turn those many interests into a focused career](/blog/the-quiz-that-maps-your-hidden-skills-to-a-new-industry "The quiz that maps your hidden skills to a new industry").
The “Curse” of a Hundred Interests
Let’s be honest, having a brain that buzzes with ideas and interests doesn’t always feel like a gift. Traditional career advice is built on a simple, linear premise: pick a path, get good at it, and climb the ladder. It’s a tidy narrative that works well for people who’ve known they [wanted to be an accountant since they were twelve](/careers/accountant "What it’s actually like to be an accountant"). For everyone else, the traditional approach feels restrictive and unnatural. It’s just not going to work.
This can lead to a unique kind of paralysis. You’re so afraid of choosing the “wrong” thing-and therefore closing the door on all the other fascinating possibilities-that you end up choosing nothing at all. You stay in a job that’s just “fine” because it keeps your options open, but it doesn’t light you up. You feel like you’re constantly starting over, dabbling in a new skill or hobby, but never gaining the mastery you crave. This isn’t a character flaw. You’re not flaky or non-committal. You’re what we call a “multi-passionate” person, and your brain is wired for exploration, not for singular, lifelong devotion to one thing.
Reframe It: You’re Not Lost, You’re a Explorer
Your diverse interests are a competitive advantage in a shifting job market. People with a wide range of skills are increasingly valuable as industries and technologies shift. They are adaptable, creative problem-solvers who can see the big picture and connect ideas in ways specialists often can’t.
Your interest in psychology might help you become a more empathetic marketing manager. Your weekend coding hobby could allow you to build a unique tool for the non-profit you work for. Your passion for storytelling could make you a brilliant and engaging project lead, no matter the industry. The goal isn’t to ditch your interests; it’s to find the common threads that run through them.
What is the "why" behind your "what"? Do you love teaching, whether it’s explaining a complex spreadsheet or showing someone how to knead dough? Is it the act of creation, whether you’re writing an article, designing a logo, or building a piece of furniture? Are you driven by solving complex problems, whether they’re in a legal document or a logistical nightmare? When you identify these underlying drivers, your scattered interests begin to look like a cohesive career path.
The Role of a Career Test for Multi-Passionate People
This is often where people start searching for a quick fix, a definitive answer. You might have searched for the perfect job title online, hoping for a single clear answer to appear. A specialized [career test](/blog/the-best-career-tests-for-adults-who-actually-want-to-pivot "The best career tests for career changers") helps identify the patterns behind your curiosity.
Many old-school career tests are blunt instruments. They ask you a few questions and spit out a job title: “You should be a forester!” Which is great, unless you hate being outside. A good [career test for multi-passionate people](/blog/the-best-career-tests-for-adults-who-actually-want-to-pivot "The best career tests for career changers") won’t just give you a list of jobs. Instead, it will help you uncover those through-lines we just talked about. It will focus on:
- **Your Work Style:** Do you thrive in collaborative teams or do you need autonomy? Do you prefer a fast-paced environment or one that’s calm and predictable?
- **Your Core Drivers:** What truly motivates you? Is it making an impact, achieving mastery, earning a high salary, or having creative freedom?
- **Your Favourite Skills:** Not just what you’re good at, but what skills you genuinely enjoy using. Do you love organising, persuading, analysing, or nurturing?
These assessments highlight the specific environments and tasks that keep you engaged over time. It’s not an answer, but a lens through which you can evaluate opportunities. It helps you understand why you enjoyed certain projects or jobs in the past and what to look for in the future. Use these results to spark new ideas rather than viewing them as a set path. A good test helps you understand your core motivations before you commit to a specific new role or industry.
Practical Steps to Find Your "For Now" Path
The goal isn’t to find the one perfect job for the rest of your life. That’s far too much pressure. The goal is to find the right challenge for right now. It’s about making your next move a conscious and informed one, based on what you know about yourself today.
1. The Theme-Finding Mission
Take a piece of paper and draw three columns. In the first column, list everything you’re interested in, no matter how random it seems. Ancient history, baking sourdough, minimalist design, true crime podcasts, social justice-get it all down.
In the second column, for each item, write down what about it fascinates you. Is it the research? The hands-on making? The storytelling? The problem-solving?
In the third column, look for the recurring verbs and themes from column two. You might notice that "organising information," "creating beauty," and "helping people understand" appear over and over again. These are your through-lines. These are the building blocks of a career that will satisfy you.
2. The Low-Stakes Experiment
Test these themes by running small, low-risk experiments. Instead of quitting your job to become a potter, how can you run a small, low-stakes experiment to test your hypothesis? An experiment isn’t about success or failure; it’s about gathering data.
- **Hypothesis:** “I think I’d love a career in user experience (UX) design because it combines my interest in psychology and my love for creative problem-solving.”
- **Experiment:** Sign up for a one-day introductory UX workshop. Offer to help a local charity redesign one page of their website for free. Interview three people who work in UX about their day-to-day work.
This approach costs you a little bit of time or money, not your entire sense of security. It gives you real-world data about whether the reality of a field matches your idea of it.
3. The Hybrid or “Portfolio” Career
Who says you have to choose just one thing? Many multi-passionate people thrive by combining their interests into a "portfolio career". This could look like:
- A part-time job as a librarian (satisfying the love for organising information).
- A [freelance side-hustle as a copywriter](/careers/copywriter "How to build a career as a copywriter") (satisfying the love for storytelling).
- A weekend passion for teaching yoga (satisfying the love for helping people).
This isn’t a strange or exceptional way to work anymore. It’s a reflection of a modern career, where you curate a professional life that fits you, rather than squeezing yourself into a pre-defined role. Identifying your core strengths can help you decide which skills to include in your professional portfolio.
Building a Career That Can Breathe
Your career path should allow for new projects and skills rather than staying static. It needs space to grow and change as you do. The pressure to get it "right" is what keeps you stuck. Focusing on what works for your current lifestyle takes the pressure off finding a permanent solution.
Every job you take, every project you start, every skill you learn is another piece of data. It teaches you something about what you enjoy, what you don’t, and how you work best. Over time, you will build a varied set of experiences that make your perspective unique. And that is far more valuable and future-proof than a linear career spent climbing a single ladder.
Your career can be a container for your curiosity, not a cage for it.
What to do next
Use these steps to start organizing your interests into a career:
- **Stop searching for a job title.** Instead, start looking for your through-lines. Grab a coffee, sit down, and do the three-column "Theme-Finding Mission" exercise. Be honest and don't censor yourself.
- **Design one small experiment.** Based on a theme you identified, what is one low-stakes way you can test it in the real world in the next month? A short online course? A conversation with someone in the field? A tiny project for a friend?
- **Reframe your thinking.** The next time you feel overwhelmed by your options, remind yourself: "I'm not flaky, I'm an explorer. My goal isn't to find my ‘one true calling’, but to find the right project for right now."
- **Use the right tools.** A good career test can provide invaluable clarity. Find one that focuses on your underlying motivations and work style, not just job titles. A well-designed [career test for multi-passionate people](/blog/the-best-career-tests-for-adults-who-actually-want-to-pivot "The best career tests for adults who actually want to pivot") is an excellent compass to guide your next experiment.