What sets your soul on fire is unique to you, and the only thing worse than feeling that fire is knowing that you didn’t do what you could about it.
All choices are the right choice for some period of time. This means that no decision is ever completely wrong; humans do not make choices that are not positive to them in some way, for some length of time. It also means that all right paths will eventually run out of their lifespan and no longer be the right path. It forces everyone to acknowledge that this idea, choice, decision will not last forever — there is no silver bullet. It removes the illusion of certainty by calling out from the beginning that this solution will have a shelf life and cannot and should not go on forever.
“My summer internship turned into several weeks worth of virtual training instead of actually working on a project, with a team, at a client. How am I supposed to talk about it in an interview?”
A bunch of people are asking this question now that fall recruiting is in full swing. While my heart breaks for those who didn’t get to experience the internship they were hoping for, I wouldn’t worry too much about how that impacts your prospects for a full-time job offer. However, there is definitely some nuance to how you want to present your experience in a professional and honest way.