What you do defines one facet of who you are. There are many facets to our whole person. "What do you do" is probably one of the first things people ask when you first meet. How they react to the answer is totally dependant on their perception of that profession. So it does matter to a lot of people.
Personally it does not matter to me what you do for income as long as you are a productive individual.
What matters most to me is what type of a personality you have. That defines you more than any of the other facets. Originally Posted by JohnMacnab
"What do you do" is probably one of the first things people ask when you first meet. Originally Posted by JohnMacnabYou said it all here. A lot of people don't understand that.
What you do defines one facet of who you are. There are many facets to our whole person. "What do you do" is probably one of the first things people ask when you first meet. How they react to the answer is totally dependant on their perception of that profession. So it does matter to a lot of people.It's funny how the question "what do you do" means "how do you make money." I do lots of things with my time, and only get paid for some!
Personally it does not matter to me what you do for income as long as you are a productive individual.
What matters most to me is what type of a personality you have. That defines you more than any of the other facets. Originally Posted by JohnMacnab
People ask "what do you do" not just to find out how much money you make, although the answer does provide a clue. The answer also provides information on your interests, on what you do with a lot of your time, and provides suggestions for further topics of conversation regarding items of mutual interest. Originally Posted by davidsmith0123I didn't say it meant "how much money do you make," I said it means "how do you make money." The question "what do you do" doesn't imply "what are your hobbies" or "how do you spend your days off" or "what would you be doing if it could be anything." And unfortunately many people (particularly many young people and/or poor people) pay their bills by doing things that have nothing to do with their interests. So if you're in a job you can't stand and working hard to get somewhere else, it's unfortunate that that's one of the first small-talk questions a person asks. It's one of the first things that define who you are to many people.