If You Do What You Love, You Might Lose the Love
Website: delvepsych.com
Instagram: @delvepsychchicago
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@DelvePsych20 [https://www.youtube.com/@DelvePsych20]
Substack: https://delvepsych.substack.com/ [https://delvepsych.substack.com/]
==Participants==
Ali McGarel
Adam W. Fominaya
==Overview of Big Ideas==
* “Do what you love and you’ll never work a day” sounds wise, but work remains work, even when it involves something meaningful.
* Turning a beloved activity into a job can change its psychological texture: money, status, proof, performance, and output start to crowd out intrinsic joy.
* Self-determination theory offers a better map for job satisfaction: autonomy, growing competence, and social connection.
* External rewards can produce short-term compliance while weakening long-term motivation.
* Good management often means setting clear standards, then giving people room to think, play, relate, and improve.
* Loving your work is possible, but it requires protecting the conditions that keep motivation alive.
* Material goals, status objects, and “base-building” often promise happiness while diverting people from connection, experience, and growth.
* Relationship skills cannot be “jinxed”; the task is to keep practicing, noticing, repairing, and acting with agency.
==Breakdown of Segments==
* Delve updates and calls to action: share the podcast, follow Delve on Instagram, and reach out for therapy services in Illinois.
* The familiar quote: Ali and Adam question the maxim “If you do what you love, you’ll never work a day in your life.”
* Acting, therapy, and the cost of proving yourself: how career pressures can alter the experience of a once-beloved vocation.
* Behaviorism, capitalism, and reward logic: why it feels obvious that rewards should increase motivation, and why psychology complicates that assumption.
* Self-determination theory: Adam introduces autonomy, growing competence, and social connection as core ingredients of intrinsic motivation.
* Extrinsic rewards and lost love: examples include basketball, grades, pizza-for-reading programs, and the shift from curiosity to performance.
* Managing for motivation: retail stories illustrate how social connection, autonomy, and play can make work more effective and less deadening.
* How to keep loving your work: distance from dollar-for-dollar thinking, meet basic financial needs, preserve autonomy, and invest in people.
* Owning less, connecting more: a critique of materialism, housing/status consumption, and the fantasy that things will deliver lasting happiness.
* Relationship skills and agency: a closing reflection on trusting skills, not catastrophizing relationships, and continuing to practice.
==AI Recommended References==
Deci, E. L., & Ryan, R. M. (1985). Intrinsic motivation and self-determination in human behavior. Plenum.
Deci, E. L., Koestner, R., & Ryan, R. M. (1999). A meta-analytic review of experiments examining the effects of extrinsic rewards on intrinsic motivation. Psychological Bulletin, 125(6), 627-668.
Kasser, T. (2002). The high price of materialism. MIT Press.
Kohn, A. (1993). Punished by rewards: The trouble with gold stars, incentive plans, A’s, praise, and other bribes. Houghton Mifflin.
Ryan, R. M., & Deci, E. L. (2000). Self-determination theory and the facilitation of intrinsic motivation, social development, and well-being. American Psychologist, 55(1), 68-78.