When you try hard at everything you do, even if it feels utterly foolish to do so, you're opening up future doors and possibilities that you might not be seeing in the moment.
Ed Helms
Cornell University Commencement 2014, 2014
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This was the practical core of Helms' philosophy of foolishness. His argument wasn't that being silly or reckless leads to success — it was that putting genuine effort into things that seem impractical or unlikely to pay off creates opportunities that rational planning could never anticipate. Helms illustrated this through the structure of his own career: each seemingly foolish choice (studying at a comedy school instead of pursuing a corporate career, doing improv for tiny audiences, taking bit parts that paid almost nothing) had been a doorway to the next, ultimately leading to The Daily Show, The Office, and major film roles. But none of those doors were visible at the time he walked through the previous one. The key phrase was 'that you might not be seeing in the moment.' The doors exist — they're real, concrete opportunities — but they're invisible to the person standing on the other side. Only effort, applied without certainty of reward, reveals them. This was the opposite of strategic career planning: it was a case for earnest, wholehearted engagement with whatever you're doing, regardless of whether it looks like it's 'going somewhere.'