Quote, originally posted by Sublimewind »I still question my career choice, but I do like what I'm doing... it's just it doesn't "feel" like it's making me happy.. I realized yesterday that I'm just one of MILLIONS that aren't happy in there jobs... silly me, I REALLY don't have anything to complain about....I originally went to college to enter a field that I really enjoyed on the side as a hobby. Relatively new field, extremely exiting to me. In my halfway point in taking my course, the industry crashed. I had one of two options. Stick with it, because I loved doing what I did, and hope the industry picked up, or drop out because getting work would be next to impossible. I did what I assume most 18 year olds with stars in their eyes and illusions of grandeur would (no offense to any 18 year olds on the board ). I figured because my heart was in it and I was pretty decent at it, I could beat the odds. I could get my diploma and still get hired in an industry where 10,000 people in the city lost thier jobs virtually overnight. Lo and behold I graduated and couldn't get work. A few of my friends found some piece work (paid by the job, and if you calculated the hours put into it, they were probably making $3 an hour...). Others entered semi-related fields (ie: taking computer engineering and working as a tech support phone guy), some went to other fields, and others went back to school to upgrade to get ahead of the curve and have a more specialized skill set to find work.6 months of pounding the pavement looking for work later, the student loans started rolling in, and it was time to look for something that paid the bills, weather I loved it or not. Fell back into the industry I was in prior to college, and stayed there for about 3 years before I couldn't hack it anymore, not to mention it was barely paying the bills. Still looked for jobs in my field of interest to no avail. Then one day stumbled upon a reprint of this article in the local paper.
http://www.martynemko.com/arti...d1380Realized it was time do bit the bullet and do what the masses do daily. Find a better paying job that could give me the lifestyle I wanted outside of work. A big pitfall of mine was that I thought I had to love life every day when I was at work, instead of seeing it as the 9-5 it is. I'd rather find a job that I didn't mind (I don't love my job, by any sense of the word, but I also don't wake up dreading the fact that I have to go in.), and come home to the life that I love. To me there's no sense in going to a job you love, and hating life when you get back because you can't pay the bills, or have no life because you're working at what you love 80 hours a week.Any time I see friends and people that knew me from high school, they can't believe my career choice. It's a COMPLETE 180 from anything I or anyone else would have expected me doing.If you're job pays you enough to do the things you love, and gives you enough free time to do them, you're sitting better than a vast majority of clock-punchers out there.
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