Being forced to try and decide what a child wanted to do at Qasim's current age was just plain unfair. There was a common theme where adults liked to inspire dreams and aspirations in children to give them some sort of direction in life. As if it would offer a sense of fulfillment. Qasim didn't understand it's need. People would decide for themselves when they were ready. There was no point in adults trying to force people in to trying to prematurely select an occupation that a child might not even want down the road.

And what was worse then bending yourself towards a 'dream job' that you ended up not even wanting? Then what would be the point of your life?

No, Qaism knew better then to try and reach for something he was unsure about. Qasim would know what he wanted to do with his life once he knew. He wasn't going to rush it or try and force himself in to a square peg when, maybe, he was more of a triangle. To him that made way more sense then trying to pigeon hole everyone in to a certain type of life style.

To some degree he understood. Adults wanted to help children prepare for adult life. But there were just some things that adults could not prepare children for, no matter how hard they tried. And some children don't necessarily want to be anything in particular when they grow up. Maybe they just want a steady 9-5 and don't care what they do.

Wouldn't that be good enough?