I've had 15 jobs in 3 years and no idea what I want to do when it comes to work

I know the job pretty well, I did a few of the responbilites as a temp and they offered me a position after a couple months of working there. I am assisting the CFO directly, working under him. It is somewhat entry level but they promised a lot more responsibility and opportunity for growth as time progresses, since it is under 10 employees at the corporate office and they already make millions in profit. What you said is exactly what I plan on doing is the challenge presents itself. I told them during the interview that I'm coming here to learn and work my ass off. I am working on my associates now, one semester left. I mentioned in another comment that Im working sometimes 50hours a week now while taking full time classes online (thank God for the semester is over). I don't mind doing mundane tasks for years to come as long as there is potential in the future. I just want to find the right career path for me, and even if I have to start at the very bottom to get where I want to go, Im okay with that. I just want to know where I'm going. That's mainly why I asked for advice in the first place. How can I discover what I'm going to be good at, as crazy and unachievable as that sounds? The thing that scares me is commiting myself to a certain role for years and realizing I hate it and Id rather work anywhere else. Yeah, I realize how stupid this whole discussion is. I feel like a lot of people struggle with never finding their passion, and I know no one can ever know me better than myself. I guess its just like someone else said, welcome to real life.

And yes, like I said above, I see why you might think that I have delusions that I'm special but I'm just trying to convey that I work hard and learn quick and im not some lazy kid who wants to get rich quick. Working for incredible companies that employ hundreds of temps, I'm told that my approach to work is different, that my mind processes information better than most people I've worked with. I didn't realize it until my employers told me and I still have a hard time believing it means anything sometimes, but hey, I'm taking it and running with it.

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