>This line also stuck out. Seems horribly dystopian to me and yet is presented without comment.
The comment is her next sentence:
>“My kids are in the office. I’m doing what I _love_, he’s doing what he _loves_, they are observing that, and they are doing what they _love_.”
The author is talking about the passion for a life hobby being one and the same as work. Instead of being dystopian, it's actually the utopia many people are striving for.
She's not talking about having a terrible job where you peel potatos and then go home and peel more potatos to bring back to work the next day.
She's also not talking about working 100 hours a week and having no life.
The comment is her next sentence:
>“My kids are in the office. I’m doing what I _love_, he’s doing what he _loves_, they are observing that, and they are doing what they _love_.”
The author is talking about the passion for a life hobby being one and the same as work. Instead of being dystopian, it's actually the utopia many people are striving for.
She's not talking about having a terrible job where you peel potatos and then go home and peel more potatos to bring back to work the next day.
She's also not talking about working 100 hours a week and having no life.