The battle being fought, unknown to the self. The constant trying to improve oneself must go on, not to quit, but reflect.
Analyzing the situation with the 3 ancient forces according to the Shrimad Bhagavad Gita:
1. One pulls you towards the grave, a heavy magnetic inertia that thrives on my passivity.
2. Fever, a restless hunger that drives you to conquer but leaves you unable to sit in a room alone.
3. Clarity that feels like peace yet often becomes its own kind of cage.
I found out that bad habits are hard to quit due to these forces. Hence, we should analyze and find out what can stop these forces and reduce their impact. It can be mindfulness, building a system, celebrating small victories, broadening our perspective, journaling, or praying.
It can be making our needs clear, having a clear priority and a plan to follow, which must be realistic and actionable, and removing the fear of failure, for which we must take action and keep reflecting on the plan. The satisfaction in one achieved consistency shouldn’t damage other aspects of life by neglecting them.
We must reflect on the consequences of an action but never take tension of the outcomes. Learn to channelize your energy, direct your focus, and time into something that is meaningful for yourself. Do not waste your time on something that isn’t worth the time and is non-rewarding.
Example: What will eating junk food do to my health? We get a picture of obesity or unhealthy side effects. This makes us avoid temporary satisfaction and get the long-term advantage of being healthy.
We are constantly fighting such battles unknown to ourselves, which we may win or lose, but should never quit and never vanish the constant feeling of improvement.
Every year’s last month, I try to find something that will help me track my habits, but after searching so many times, I would always stumble upon a premium purchase-based or ad-integrated habit tracker app. I wanted something free,simple, and useful. After trying many apps and websites, I finally found the best solution.
I want to tell you that I am taking a challenge.
I’m not waiting until January 1st. I’m starting today, and I want you to witness this commitment.
Here’s what I’m challenging myself to achieve:
To be healthy, fit, and maintain a good physique
To be studious and consistently learn
To be disciplined and show up daily
To be honest with myself, no matter what
I take this challenge by taking small steps at a time,firstly by installing the habit of brushing twice. To wake up early in the morning, not missing a single day for the next 30 days, followed by exercise and movement. With that, I will finish a book this month. Also, to be accountable, I will track myself throughout these 30 days, and for that, I found a very realistic, to-the-point, and useful app which I will continue to use for next year to keep track and be consistent, making and transforming myself, building habits. These words will be used as proof of my commitment after these 30 days.
The name of the app is Loop Habit Tracker, it’s not like any other, too much gamified, ad-filled, and forcing you to buy their premium rather than being an open source mobile app that has a very basic, minimalistic UI, and you can track yourself very easily without any need to buy a subscription or watch ads in between. The best thing is it’s FREE!
Before you download this app, I want you to know that as I continue to use this app for next 30 days I will keep on updating it and will show you the results,also this app being free and open source I am not doing its affiliate marketing or promotion,just sharing because I found it most useful and best among all other apps available,you can even export your data that has its own advantages.
“Motivation is what gets you started. Habit is what keeps you going.” — Jim Ryun
Also I want you to join me and use this app and if you like it I will suggest you to continue it to next year to,I think that we must build a momentum to build the habit a month before new year and continue it with full enthusiasm.
Every note in Marathi music carries centuries of devotion, poetry, and cultural memory. Whether one has grown up singing or has just discovered these songs, these five tracks represent the heart and soul of Maharashtra’s musical tradition. Each one reflects a story that is greater than words and connects listeners to something beyond words.
Artist: Lata Mangeshkar Music: Pt. Hridaynath Mangeshkar
Lyricist: Sant Dnyaneshwar
Imagine a honeybee humming from flower to flower, drawn by irresistible fragrance. That is the metaphor Sant Dnyaneshwar applies here in the case of spiritual longing. The repetitive “runujhunu” is like the sound of tinkling bells or buzzing that creates this almost hypnotic quality that draws you in.
This devotional number gets a soft and meditative touch in Lata Mangeshkar’s voice. Not loud, not dramatic, but an invite to shed your cares and float for some time around in the divine presence. What if, instead, devotion was as instinctive as a bee seeking nectar? Or what if returning home to divinity were that easy?
This is cornerstone Marathi bhakti music-the kind to which kirtans have been sung for generations on pilgrimages, in temples, and in front yards where families gather for evening prayers.
Artists: Pt. Bhimsen Joshi and Dr. Vasantrao Deshpande
Lyricist: Jagdish Khebudkar
Raag: Yaman
Here’s where things get interesting. “Taal Bole Chipalila” literally means “the rhythm speaks to the sparrow”-imagine nature itself joining in devotional celebration. This abhang celebrates music and dance as paths to the divine, but with a radical message: everyone’s equal when they’re singing God’s praises. Rich, poor, educated, uneducated-none of that matters.
The lyrics preach something so beautiful: let go of your material attachments, serve humanity, and express your devotion through all of your being — singing, dancing, being fully present. The mridanga, a classical drum, really moves the rhythm along with infectious energy.
With stalwarts like Bhimsen Joshi and Vasantrao Deshpande rendering it, one can be assured of something special. Their voices bring in both technical brilliance and genuine devotional fervor.
“Maher” means your mother’s ancestral home-that place you go back to for comfort and a sense of belonging. Sant Eknath describes the sacred city of Pandharpur, the residence of Lord Vitthal, as precisely that-the soul’s true home.
This 16th-century composition still resonates powerfully today. Every year, millions of pilgrims walk hundreds of kilometers during the Wari, or pilgrimage season, to reach Pandharpur, and many sing this very song along the way. It invokes the Bhima River, Pundlik, or Vitthal’s devoted follower, and the sacred geography of Maharashtra-grounding spiritual yearning in real physical places.
The longing in this song is palpable. It’s not abstract theological concepts; it’s homesickness for the divine. That’s what makes it so universally moving, even if you’ve never been to Pandharpur.
Sometimes the most powerful prayers are the simplest ones. “Toha Vitthal Barva, Toha Madhav Barva” — You are Vitthal, You are Madhav. That, in essence, is the entire song, to be repeated with devotional intensity.
Simplicity does not necessarily mean a lack of depth. This abhang proclaims the unity of God amidst names and forms that may vary. It is an appeal to godhead person to person, without metaphorical phrases. Just pure surrender and recognition.
This is the kind of song that catches fire in group kirtans. Hundreds of voices join together in this simple affirmation, and something shifts in the room. Participatory spirituality doesn’t get much better than this: no musical training or theological knowledge required, just sincerity.
Now we’re switching gears completely. This is natyasangeet — classical Marathi musical theater — and it shows an entirely different side of Marathi musical tradition. Composed for the 1911 musical drama “Sangeet Manapman,” this song explores romantic love and martial valor rather than devotion.
“Zhale Yuvatimana Darun Ran Ruchir Premshe”-the heart of the young maiden becomes passionate through the beauty of love and warfare. It is like classically Indian rasa theory, aesthetic emotion, meets Marathi storytelling. The composition is sophisticated, restrained, emotionally nuanced, everything you would have expected from a golden age of Marathi musical theatre.
The rendition by Pt. Anand Bhate is masterful, showcasing how traditional Marathi composers integrated classical frameworks with vernacular language and local sensibilities. This is art music-better appreciated for the technical brilliance and emotional subtlety with which it is rendered.
Why These Songs Matter Today These five songs are not relics; they are living traditions that continue to move people, for they tap into something universal. The devotional pieces speak to anyone who’s ever felt that longing for something beyond themselves — whether you call it God, truth, home, or simply meaning. And “Zhale Yuvati Mana” sends us a reminder that Marathi music isn’t all about temples and pilgrimages. It’s also about artistic excellence, classical aesthetics, and the full range of human emotion.
From Sant Dnyaneshwar’s folk-devotional metaphors to the classical sophistication of early 20th-century theater, these songs showcase the incredible breadth of Marathi musical heritage. Each one offers something different: meditation, celebration, longing, surrender, and artistry.
So listen to them. Allow the melodies to work on you. You might not understand every word if you don’t speak Marathi, but the emotions transcend language. And who knows? You might find yourself humming “Runujhunu Re” weeks later, still thinking about that honeybee searching for divine nectar.
I was to attend a lot of meetings,classes,do activities and submit in a single month,I was losing grip over time and felt that if everything keeps going so fast and I forget deadlines and tasks I need to do, I will end up doing a lot of harm to myself, and everything would become a total mess. I felt very stressed, and I literally shouted ‘Emergency!’
I was so desperate to find a solution, at least a first-aid kind of thing, to fix this, so I used Chat-GPT, told it what was going on, and it came up with a solution. The response was “ Provide me the timetable” I was like Alright, here you go. After uploading my weekly class timetable(schedule) with all days and time slots mentioned, it told me that I will be generating a “CSV” file with this, and you just have to import it into your Google Calendar.
Press enter or click to view image in full size
After the generation of the file, I was provided with the CSV. I prompted it to show me how to upload that :
1.Put your events in a spreadsheet with headers like: Subject, Start Date, Start Time, End Date, End Time, Description, Location, etc., then save as CSV.
2.Open Google Calendar on computer → click gear icon → Settings → Import & export.
Press enter or click to view image in full size
3.In “Import,” choose your CSV file and pick the calendar to add events to → click Import → check events on the calendar.
Press enter or click to view image in full size
BOOM! All my timetable appeared on the screen in coloured tiles, saving a lot of my time. Then it asked me to upload my exam,activities and other events too in a PDF or clearly visible image format and came up with a quick output. I also used another browser named “Comet”, which has the option of connecting Google Calendar to the assistant, and it made my work so smooth that just a line would do the work.
Each day, I was notified of the upcoming event and classes I needed to attend. I submitted all my projects on time. With this,I use this to add new events too.
Here is the prompt : "You are a CSV-generation assistant. Your task is to convert any timetable I provide into a Google Calendar–compatible CSV file using the following required format and columns:
CSV Columns (exact order): Subject | Start Date | Start Time | End Date | End Time | All Day Event | Description | Location | Private
Formatting rules:
Start Date & End Date: Use MM/DD/YYYY format.
Start Time & End Time: Use h:mm AM/PM format.
All Day Event: Always FALSE unless explicitly stated.
Private: Always TRUE unless stated otherwise.
Description: Use any extra notes I provide.
Location: Fill if provided; leave blank if not.
If I say my schedule is weekly, repeat weekly events for 1 month (or longer if I specify).
If I give monthly, one-time, or irregular events, match dates exactly.
Output must be a clean CSV table, nothing else.
Never include example rows; only output the generated timetable.
Input formats I may use:
Weekly timetable (e.g., Mon 9–11 Math)
Monthly schedule
Free-text class descriptions
A structured list
Copy/pasted rows
Anything understandable in natural language
Your job: Convert my input into a valid Google Calendar CSV following the rules above. Before generating the final CSV, do 3 quick steps:
Confirm your understanding of the schedule (summarize it).
Ask me if I want weekly repetition, one-time events, or a specific date range.
You’ve probably heard the debates: Is college worth it? Do you really need a four-year degree to succeed? The student debt crisis has Americans questioning everything we thought we knew about higher education.
Enter Elon Musk, who has an opinion that will make some parents nervous and students feel vindicated.
The billionaire entrepreneur does not mince words: you do not have to go to college. But his reasoning goes deeper than the usual “drop out and start a company” narrative you hear from Silicon Valley. Musk sees something bigger coming-a technological wave that will reshape what skills even matter.
Let’s break down exactly what Musk thinks about college, why he thinks traditional education is facing its biggest challenge yet, and what that means for your future.
Bottom Line: College is Not a Requirement
Musk says it outright: he does not believe you have to go to college.
This is not just some casual remark but really a reflection of his overall philosophy on how people learn, and what matters in career building. When Musk built SpaceX and Tesla, he didn’t require that his engineers have certain degrees. Repeatedly, he has asserted that he’s far more concerned with what you can do than with where you studied.
But here’s where it gets interesting: Musk isn’t saying that anyone should skip college. What he’s saying is more nuanced: you don’t have to go to college to get the skills you’ll need, but it might still be worth your time for other reasons.
The Real Reasons to Go to College (According to Musk)
If college isn’t about job skills, why go at all?
Musk identifies two legitimate reasons that still make college worthwhile today.
Social Development and Being Around Your Peers
The first is social: College puts you around people your own age in a learning environment. You don’t just sit in classes; you live, argue, collaborate, and figure out who you are alongside thousands of other people doing the same thing.
This is far more important than most people acknowledge.
Your twenties are when you build the network that’s going to shape the rest of your life: the roommate who becomes your co-founder, the study group that turns into lifelong friends, the late-night conversations that challenge everything you thought you believed.
You can’t recreate that on YouTube.
Musk’s own experience bears this out. He attended Queen’s University in Ontario before transferring to the University of Pennsylvania, where he graduated with degrees in economics and physics. Those years brought him into contact with people, ideas, and opportunities that he wouldn’t have encountered otherwise.
Pursuing Authentic Intellectual Interests
The latter reason for going to college is even simpler: because you want to learn something specific.
If you’re genuinely interested in studying either the sciences or arts and sciences, college offers structured access to knowledge and experts that you won’t easily find elsewhere. Want to understand quantum mechanics? Study Renaissance literature? Dive into molecular biology? College gives you the resources, the guidance, and the accountability to actually do it.
Musk emphasizes this, because that’s how he learns. He’s famously self-taught in rocket science and engineering, but he believes in deep knowledge. If college helps you acquire that knowledge in an area you care about, it’s worth considering.
The key word here is “genuine.” Don’t go because your parents expect it, or because “that’s just what you do.” Go because the subject matter actually interests you.
Take the Wide Range of Courses
That’s where Musk diverges from the usual “college is useless” crowd.
If you do decide to go to college, he advises the student to try to learn as much as possible across a wide range of subjects. He does not believe college is “too generalized”; actually, he believes it is good to take courses outside your major.
Why does this matter? Because the future belongs to people who can connect the dots across disciplines.
Consider Musk’s own career: he has built electric cars, solar energy systems, brain-computer interfaces, and rocket ships. None of these fit neatly into one academic department. Each requires understanding physics, engineering, economics, design, manufacturing, and human behavior.
Problems that must be solved do not respect departmental boundaries.
If you’re in college, don’t just take the minimum requirements. Take that class in philosophy. Take that weird anthropology class. Take that statistics class, even if you’re a literature major. Learn how to code even if you’re a business major.
The connections you draw between different areas of knowledge can often be more important than deep expertise in a single area.
The Coming Wave: Why AI Changes Everything
Now we get to the part that makes Musk’s college advice really interesting.
He predicts that skills you learn at college are unlikely to be necessary anymore sometime in the future, not because education is irrelevant but because of an impending radical shift of what human beings need to know because of technology.
The “Supersonic Tsunami” of AI and Robotics
Musk describes AI advancements and robotics as a “supersonic tsunami.” According to him, this is the most radical change humanity has ever seen.
Think about it for a second: more radical than the Industrial Revolution, more transformative than the internet, more disruptive than electricity.
We’re heading, he says, toward a “postwork society”-one in which AI and robots will be able to perform most of the tasks we currently train people to do: the accountant poring over spreadsheets, the lawyer researching case law, the engineer designing components, the radiologist reading X-rays.
All of these roles require skills that AI is quickly learning to perform faster and more cheaply-often better than humans.
This is not some science fiction distant scenario; this is now. GPT-4 can write code, analyze data, draft legal documents, and explain complex ideas. The robots are increasingly dexterous. Self-driving technology keeps improving. Change accelerates, and
Even Tech-Savvy Students See It Coming
Indeed, what makes this prediction even more striking is the fact that Musk’s own sons agree with him.
His older sons are currently at university and are “pretty steeped in technology.” They understand AI, they see what’s happening, and they acknowledge that AI will probably make their skills unnecessary in the future.
But they still want to go to college.
This suggests that at least those young people who do understand the technology and who take Musk’s prediction seriously also value for other reasons than job training.
The social connections do matter; the intellectual exploration does, too; so does the experience of being in that environment.
Just not for the reasons most people think.
What This Means for Your Decision
So, where does this leave you if you’re trying to decide whether to attend college?
Musk’s perspective gives a framework beyond the typical advice of “follow your passion” or “get a practical degree.” Don’t Go for Job Skills Alone
If you’re going to college simply because you think it will train you for a specific career, then you need to think again. The career you’re training for might well not exist in its current form once you graduate.
That doesn’t mean education is worthless; it means you need to think differently about what you’re actually getting from college.
Go for the Right Reasons
If you do go to college, do it because:
- You want the social experience of learning along with your peers
- You are genuinely interested in a field of study
You will enjoy exposure to a wide range of ideas and opinions.
- You appreciate the structure and accountability of a formal education environment.
These reasons hold up even in a world where AI transforms the job market.
Focus on Learning How to Learn
The ability to learn quickly is the single most important skill you will ever develop-whether or not you go to college.
Musk himself embodies all of that. He taught himself rocket science by reading textbooks. He learned about battery technology, solar energy and neuroscience as he built companies in those fields.
In the coming decades, winners will not be those with the most specialized knowledge but those who will adapt, learn new skills, and apply knowledge across a wide array of domains.
College can certainly help you develop this ability, but only if you approach it with the right frame of mind.
The Larger Context: Musk’s History of Commentary on Education
As often mentioned, Musk has long questioned traditional models of education.
He pulled his own children out of traditional schools and created Ad Astra (now Astra Nova), an experimental school focused on problem-solving and critical thinking rather than following a standard curriculum. He’s spoken repeatedly about how conventional education prepares students for a world that no longer exists.
This philosophy permeates his companies. SpaceX and Tesla hire based on ability, not credentials; both companies have hired incredibly talented engineers who either dropped out or never went to college.
But Musk isn’t anti-education. He’s anti-credentialism. There’s a difference.
He values deep knowledge and rigorous thinking. He just doesn’t believe you need a university’s stamp of approval to prove you have those qualities.
Practical Takeaways for Students and Parents
If you’re a student trying to decide about college, here is what Musk’s perspective would suggest:
Not everyone needs or requires college; see if it really serves your goals and interests, not because society says so.
If you go, go broad. Take courses in lots of departments. It is the connections between disciplines that matter more than ever.
**Focus on adaptability over specialization. The specific things you learn today will surely be obsolete one day. The ability to learn new skills won’t.
Value the social aspects; relationships and experiences are as important as the course work.
Keep learning outside of class. College is not your sole source of education. Read widely. Build projects. Experiment.
Well, if you’re a parent, Musk’s advice is to:
Question the assumption that your child must go to college; support them in finding the path that actually fits their interests and strengths.
**If they do attend, encourage intellectual curiosity. The idea of pushing someone only toward “practical” majors simply doesn’t make sense anymore, as the world is changing too fast.
Help them develop adaptability: The most valuable thing that you can give to your child is not a set of specific skills but confidence and the ability to learn whatever they need to learn.
The Uncomfortable Truth About the Future
Musk’s prediction about AI and the post-work society is uncomfortable because those are fundamental assumptions about how society works.
We’ve built our whole education system, our economy, and our sense of self-worth around the idea that people need to work and that education prepares you for that work.
What happens when that’s no longer the case?
Musk doesn’t have all the answers, mind you. He has floated ideas like universal basic income. But the honest truth is, nobody really knows how this transition will play out.
What is beyond doubt is that clinging to outdated models such as assuming a college degree automatically means a good job sets people up for disappointment.
Living a fulfilling life with an uncertain future requires finding your path.
The future Musk describes is one that’s both exhilarating and terrifying.
On the one hand, a world where AI handles the routine cognitive tasks liberates humans to focus on creativity, relationships, and pursuits we find genuinely meaningful.
On the other hand, it creates huge uncertainty about how people will support themselves and find purpose.
College is not the response to that uncertainty. For a great many, however, it proves to be an enormously rewarding experience, just not for the reasons we have traditionally assumed.
You don’t go to college to learn a trade; you go to explore ideas, challenge yourself, meet people who will change the way you think, and figure out what matters to you.
Those things remain valuable, even if AI makes your accounting degree obsolete.
The Real Question You Should Be Asking
Rather than asking, “Should I go to college?”, a better question might be: “How do I prepare for a world that’s changing faster than anyone can predict?
The answer would be, from Musk’s words and actions:
Stay curious. Learn constantly. Do not limit yourself to one field or discipline. Make things. Take risks. Pay attention to problems that matter.
College can be part of that path, but it’s not the path itself.
It’s time for the supersonic tsunami, and you get to decide how you want to ride it.Frequently Asked Questions Does Elon Musk think college is a waste of time? No, Musk believes that college is worth it for social reasons and if you really enjoy the subject matter, but he does not believe it is necessary in terms of preparing yourself with job skills for the future. What does Musk mean by a “postwork society”? Musk believes that through AI and robotics, most tasks that people presently do in order to gain a living will be done, creating a society where working, as we know it today, is optional or simply not necessary. Did Elon Musk go to college himself? Yes, Musk attended Queen’s University in Ontario and later transferred to the University of Pennsylvania, where he earned a degree in economics and physics. What does Musk recommend to study in college? Musk advises taking a wide range of courses across different subjects rather than specializing too narrowly. He thinks that broad knowledge across disciplines is much better than deep specialization in one particular area. How soon does Musk believe AI will replace human workers? While Musk hasn’t given a timeline for such change, he describes the change as “a supersonic tsunami,” so relatively fast. His own tech-savvy sons already believe their college skills will likely become unnecessary in their lifetimes. Can you be successful without college, just like Elon Musk? Yes, but keep in mind he finished college. Musk’s companies hire based on capability rather than credentials. Lots of people have successful careers without degrees, but the critical thing is proving capability through what you create and do.
Elon Musk on College: Why He Says You Don't Need a Degree (But You Might Want One Anyway)
Elon Musk on College: Why He Says You Don't Need a Degree (But You Might Want One Anyway)
You've no doubt heard the debates: Is college worth it? Do you really need a four-year degree to succeed? The student debt crisis has Americans questioning everything we thought we knew about higher education.
Enter Elon Musk with an opinion that will make some parents nervous and students feel vindicated.
The billionaire entrepreneur doesn't mince words: you don't have to go to college. But his reasoning goes deeper than the usual "drop out and start a company" narrative you hear from Silicon Valley. Musk sees something bigger coming-a technological wave that will reshape what skills even matter.
Let's break down exactly what Musk thinks about college, why he thinks traditional education is facing its biggest challenge yet, and what that means for your future.
Bottom Line: College is Not a Requirement
Musk says it outright: he doesn't believe you need to go to college.
This isn't some offhand comment; it's a reflection of his broader philosophy about how people learn and what actually matters in building a career. When Musk built SpaceX and Tesla, he didn't require that his engineers have certain degrees. Repeatedly, he said that he's far more concerned with what you can do than with where you studied.
But here's where it gets interesting. Musk isn't telling everyone to skip college. He's saying something more nuanced: college isn't necessary to get the skills you'll need, but it might still be worth your time for other reasons.
The Real Reasons to Go to College (According to Musk)
If college isn't about job skills, why go at all?
Musk identifies two legitimate reasons that still make college worthwhile today.
Social Development and Being Around Your Peers
The first is social: College puts you around people your own age in a learning environment. You don't just sit in classes; you live, argue, collaborate, and figure out who you are alongside thousands of other people doing the same thing.
This is much more important than most people acknowledge.
Your twenties are when you build the network that'll shape the rest of your life. The roommate who becomes your co-founder, the study group that turns into lifelong friends, the late-night conversations that challenge everything you thought you believed.
You can't recreate that on YouTube.
Musk's own experience bears this out. He attended Queen's University in Ontario before transferring to the University of Pennsylvania, where he graduated with degrees in economics and physics. Those years brought him into contact with people, ideas, and opportunities that he wouldn't have encountered otherwise.
Pursuing Authentic Intellectual Interests
The second reason for attending college is simpler: because you want to learn something specific.
If you're genuinely interested in studying the sciences or the arts and sciences, college offers structured access to knowledge and experts you won't easily find elsewhere. Want to understand quantum mechanics? Study Renaissance literature? Dive into molecular biology? College gives you the resources, the guidance, and the accountability to actually do it.
Musk emphasizes this, because that's how he learns. He is famously self-taught in rocket science and engineering, but he believes in deep knowledge. If college helps you acquire that knowledge in an area you care about, it's worth considering.
The key word here is "genuine." Don't go because your parents expect it, or because "that's just what you do." Go because the subject matter actually interests you.
Take the Wide Range of Courses
That's where Musk diverges from the usual "college is useless" crowd.
If you do decide to go to college, he advises the student to try to learn as much as possible across a wide range of subjects. He doesn't believe college is "too generalized"; in fact, he believes it is good to take courses outside your major.
This matters because the future belongs to people who can connect the dots across disciplines.
Consider Musk's own career. He has built electric cars, solar energy systems, brain-computer interfaces, and rocket ships. None of these fit neatly into one academic department. Each requires understanding physics, engineering, economics, design, manufacturing, and human behavior.
The problems that need solving don't respect departmental boundaries.
So if you are in college, don't just take the minimum requirements. Take a class in philosophy. Take that weird anthropology class. Take statistics even if you're a literature major. Learn how to code even if you're a business major.
The connections you make between different fields of knowledge often matter more than deep expertise in just one area.
The Coming Wave: Why AI Changes Everything
Now we get to the part that makes Musk's college advice really interesting.
He predicts that skills you learn at college are unlikely to be necessary anymore sometime in the future. Not because education is irrelevant but because of an impending radical shift of what human beings need to know because of technology.
The "Supersonic Tsunami" of AI and Robotics
Musk explains AI advancements and robotics as a "supersonic tsunami." In his viewpoint, this is the most radical change that humanity has ever seen.
Think about that for a second: more radical than the Industrial Revolution, more transformative than the internet, more disruptive than electricity.
We are heading, he says, toward a "postwork society"-one in which AI and robots will be able to perform most of the tasks we currently train people to do: the accountant poring over spreadsheets, the lawyer researching case law, the engineer designing components, the radiologist reading X-rays.
All of these roles require skills that AI is quickly learning to perform faster and more cheaply, often better than humans.
This is not some science fiction distant scenario. It's now. GPT-4 can write code, analyze data, draft legal documents, and explain complex ideas. The robots are increasingly dexterous. Self-driving technology keeps improving. Change accelerates, and
Even Tech-Savvy Students See It Coming
Indeed, what makes this prediction even more striking is the fact that Musk's own sons agree with him.
His older sons are at university right now and are "pretty steeped in technology." They understand AI, they see what's happening, and they acknowledge that AI will probably make their skills unnecessary in the future.
But they still want to go to college.
This suggests something: at least the young who do understand the technology and take Musk's prediction seriously also value for other reasons than job training.
The social connections matter. The intellectual exploration matters. The experience of being in that environment matters.
Just not for the reasons most people think.
What This Means for Your Decision
So, where does this leave you if you're trying to decide whether to attend college?
Musk's perspective gives a framework that is beyond the typical advice of "follow your passion" or "get a practical degree."
Don't Go for Job Skills Alone
If you are going to college purely because you think it will train you for a specific career, you need to reconsider. The career that you are training for may well not exist in its current form when you graduate.
That doesn't mean education is worthless; it means you need to think differently about what you're actually getting from college.
Go for the Right Reasons
If you do go to college, do it because:
- You want the social experience of learning along with your peers
- You are genuinely interested in a field of study
You will like exposure to a variety of ideas and perspectives.
- You value a formal education environment's structure and accountability.
These reasons hold up even in a world where AI transforms the job market.
Focus on Learning How to Learn
The ability to learn quickly is the single most important skill you will ever develop-whether or not you go to college.
Musk himself is the embodiment of all that. He taught himself rocket science by reading textbooks. He learned about battery technology, solar energy and neuroscience as he built companies in those fields.
The winners in the decades to come aren't those who have the most specialized knowledge but rather the ones who will adapt, learn new skills, and apply knowledge across various domains.
College can help you develop this ability, but only if you approach it with the right mindset.
The Larger Context: Musk's History of Commentary on Education
It is worth mentioning that Musk has long questioned traditional models of education.
He pulled his own children out of traditional schools and created Ad Astra (now Astra Nova), an experimental school focused on problem-solving and critical thinking rather than following a standard curriculum. He's spoken repeatedly about how conventional education prepares students for a world that no longer exists.
This philosophy permeates his companies. SpaceX and Tesla hire based on ability, not credentials; both companies have hired incredibly talented engineers who dropped out or never went to college.
But Musk isn't anti-education. He's anti-credentialism. There's a difference.
He values deep knowledge and rigorous thinking. He just doesn't believe you need a university's stamp of approval to prove you have those qualities.
Practical Takeaways for Students and Parents
If you are a student trying to decide about college, here is what Musk's perspective would suggest:
Don't assume college is a requirement. See if it really serves your goals and interests, and not just because society says so.
If you go, go broad. Take courses in lots of departments. It's the connections between disciplines that matter more than ever.
Focus on adaptability over specialization. The particular skills you learn today will surely become obsolete. The ability to learn new skills won't.
Value the social aspects: relationships and experiences mean as much as the course work.
Keep learning outside of class. College is not your sole source of education. Read widely. Build projects. Experiment.
If you're a parent, Musk's advice says that you should:
Question the assumption that your child must go to college. Support them in finding the path that actually fits their interests and strengths.
If they do attend, encourage intellectual curiosity. Don't just push them toward "practical" majors. The world is changing too fast for that approach to make sense.
Help them develop adaptability: The most valuable thing you can give to your child is not a specific skill set; it's the confidence and ability to learn whatever they need to learn.
The Uncomfortable Truth About the Future
Musk's prediction about AI and the post-work society is uncomfortable because these are fundamental assumptions about how society works.
We've built our whole education system, our economy, and our sense of self-worth around the idea that people need to work and that education prepares you for that work.
What happens when that's no longer the case?
Musk doesn't have all the answers, mind you. He has floated ideas like universal basic income. But the honest truth is that nobody really knows how this transition will play out.
What is beyond doubt is that holding on to obsolete models—such as assuming a college degree guarantees a good job—sets people up for disappointment.
Finding Your Path in an Uncertain World
The future Musk describes is at once exhilarating and terrifying.
On one hand, a world where AI handles routine cognitive tasks frees humans to focus on creativity, relationships, and pursuits we find genuinely meaningful.
On the other hand, it creates huge uncertainty about how people will support themselves and find purpose.
College isn't the answer to this uncertainty. But for many people, it is a valuable experience, just not for the reasons we have always thought.
You don't go to college to learn a trade; you go to explore ideas, challenge yourself, meet people who will change how you think, and figure out what matters to you.
Those things remain valuable, even if AI makes your accounting degree obsolete.
The Real Question You Should Be Asking
Instead of asking, "Should I go to college?," a better question might be: "How do I prepare for a world that's changing faster than anyone can predict?"
The answer would be, from Musk's words and actions:
Stay inquisitive. Learn continually. Don't confine yourself to a single discipline. Create things. Take risks. Focus on problems that matter.
College can be part of that path, but it's not the path itself.
The supersonic tsunami is near. You get to decide how you want to ride it.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Elon Musk think college is a waste of time?
No. Musk believes that for social reasons and if you genuinely like the subject matter, college is worthwhile. He just doesn't believe it's needed when it comes to gaining job skills in the future.
What does Musk mean by a "postwork society"?
Musk thinks that through AI and robotics, most tasks that people currently do to earn a living will be done, creating a society where working, as we understand it today, is optional or simply not necessary.
Did Elon Musk go to college himself?
Yes, Musk attended Queen's University in Ontario and later transferred to the University of Pennsylvania, where he earned a degree in economics and physics.
What does Musk recommend to study in college?
Musk advises taking a wide range of courses across different subjects rather than specializing too narrowly. He thinks that broad knowledge across disciplines is much better than deep specialization in one particular area.
How soon does Musk believe AI will replace human workers?
While Musk hasn't given a timeline for such change, he describes the change as "a supersonic tsunami," so relatively fast. His own tech-savvy sons already believe their college skills will likely become unnecessary in their lifetimes.
Can you be successful without college, just like Elon Musk?
Yes, but keep in mind he finished college. Musk's companies hire based on capability rather than credentials. Lots of people have successful careers without degrees, but the critical thing is proving capability through what you create and do.