clipped from: www.nytimes.com   

COMMENCEMENT speakers have long offered graduating seniors the same warm and gooey career advice: Do what you love.


And graduates have long responded the same way: They've listened carefully, nodded earnestly, and gone out and become accountants. No surprise. On every day except graduation day, young people are taught that their futures depend not on following their bliss, but on mastering dutiful (and less lovable) abilities like crunching numbers and following rules.


But this year is different.

"Do what you love" is no longer a soft-hearted sentiment. It is also a hard-headed strategy.

So accountants lose work to TurboTax. And lawyers lose work to legal Web sites that offer uncontested divorces for $249 and articles of incorporation for the price of a pizza. To cope, we'll have to rely on what's harder to replicate in the 1's and 0's of computer code - inventiveness, empathy and seeing the big picture - which also happen to be the components of satisfying work.