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Why can't you make my dreams come true on my days off?

When I talk with young people, I often meet people who want to be self-sufficient and achieve their dreams at the same time and in the same place.

I know exactly how they feel, because I used to be like that myself.

In my case, my goal was to become a musician. Now I am a voice actor or a manga artist? Illustrator? I often meet people who want to be an artist.

I don't meet many people who want to be athletes. There are people who want to be dancers. There are people who want to be professional gamers.

To put it in a rather clichéd way, they want to make a career out of what they love to do.

What would happen to such dreams and goals, for example, if they were realized on Saturdays and Sundays after working as a cashier at a convenience store from Monday to Friday?

What if the income from "what you want to do" and "what you have no choice but to do" are 100,000 yen each?

Apparently, people who are chasing their dreams say that they get all of their living expenses from "what they want to do.

And they seem to want to live in such a way that they can work "what they want to do" in any season and on any day of the week.

Money, or time, is "not enough", maybe...

Not all work is exchanged for money. Even housework is work.
Even going to bed early for your own health or keeping your nails and hair clean is important work, to put it in an extreme dignified way.

I think they are mixing up "work" and "economy".






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