Passion isn't enthusiasm. It's the thing you'd still do if no-one was watching, no-one was grading, and the algorithm wasn't serving you anything. It's what AI has nothing of.
By the time you're 12 you've been told a hundred times to "follow your passion," usually by an adult who looks bored. So the word has been worn down. Let's restart.
Passion is not "I like this." It's "I keep coming back to this when nobody asked me to."
It's the thing you accidentally know more about than the adults in your life. The book you reread. The one weird Wikipedia rabbit hole. The reason you stay up too late. The thing you'd defend in an argument with a teacher. The hobby everyone in your family has stopped asking about because it's just you now.
If you're 15+ and you have no idea what your passion is — that's normal. Most adults don't either. The point of this site isn't to make you pick one. It's to notice, when one shows up, that AI is very dumb without it and very dangerous with the wrong substitute.
Before AI, "having a passion" was a nice trait. It made you a more interesting person at dinner parties. After AI, it's a hard input.
AI generates writing, images, code, and music in seconds. The cost of making something has dropped close to zero. Which means the rare resource is no longer skill — it's knowing what's worth making in the first place. And that knowledge comes from caring deeply about something specific. From having a thing.
Look at it from the AI's side: when you give Claude a prompt, the model has to decide what to write. With nothing specific from you, it averages. It writes the median essay on photosynthesis. With something specific from you — "the difference between a downy and a hairy woodpecker" — the model has territory to be useful in. You gave it a domain only you would have asked for.
The kid with passion gives AI a target. The kid without one gets the median back.
Maya is 12 and has memorized 42 local birds. She asks Claude:
Claude generates a Skill that knows Maya's specific four birds, with the field marks she'd quiz on, in the order of difficulty she would quiz Leo on. It's not a bird Skill — it's her bird Skill.
The same age. The same access to Claude. Asks:
Claude makes a fine, generic, tasteless quiz Skill about U.S. presidents. It works. It is also exactly what every other prompt like this has produced this year. The kid does nothing with it.
What passion does: it converts the AI from an answer-machine into a tool that goes somewhere only you would have sent it.
You can't manufacture passion on purpose. But you can stop killing it. Three things, all uncomfortable:
1. Stop performing. By 15, most kids have spent years faking interest in whatever the adults around them reward — coaches, teachers, college counselors, parents. The first job is to find a thing you genuinely like that no-one is praising you for. That's where the real fire lives.
2. Go deeper than the algorithm wants you to. Algorithms reward breadth — they want you scrolling. Passion is the opposite. It rewards depth. The 18th video in a row about your thing isn't your passion; it's the feed's. Try saving 10 things, putting your phone down, and rereading them tomorrow. The ones that hold up are yours.
3. Make something only you would make. The fastest way to find your passion is to make a thing nobody asked you for, with no audience, that requires real effort. The act of building reveals what you actually care about — fast.