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I'd like to contribute some words of wisdom, but I've just spent the last three days building starships out of Lego. I don't think I'm the right person to give out life advice.

If I ever find a way of doing something I love AND making a living out of it, I'll get back to you. However, please don't read this as a "give up, it's impossible" advice. It's not. I mean it quite seriously- I'm working on it, and if I do figure it out, I'll let you know :)
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Emachine9643: Geez atleast you had an idea for a career path early in life. Im 30 and still don't know what to do with my life so I push a broom in one job and bag stuff in the next job.... Take some time off and figure it out and if you can, go travel.
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MaximumBunny: What's stopping you from finding out what you want to do? :o
I like pretty much everything but don't feel a passion or drive towards a particular thing. Now I'm thinking of picking up an easy trade just so I have a few extra bucks in my pocket. I envy people that just know what they want to do in life.

Stuff I seriously considered doing-
Nurse
Lawyer
Cop
Journalist
Camera man
Store manager
Something with computers
Something to do with battered children and women
Pilot (I still want my license for a small non commercial plane)
Theres more but can't remember and no real pattern to what I like.
In regards to the manual labour thing, I was working for a compnay as a CSR for 10 years, was offered a management position 3 times over the course of my employment but turned it down every time because... I hated cvustomer service. I have the ability to be polite in the face of whatever the customer was throwing at me, but I hated it. I wanted to punch every customer in their god damn mouth every single time. I knew it was unsustainable, that even though I was contstantly told how good I was at my position that I was going to murder everytone in that office someday if nothing changed.

So, I go out and look for something that has zero customer interaction. I'm now a shipper/reciever in a watehouse. Have way better benefits, payed (slightly) better, and while I'm now tired as hell every day when I get home, at least I'm not raging and coming up with an excuse to not go in to work the next day. I got the job easily too, no experience, but they were very interested in the fact I had the same job for 10 years prior. My current boss even told me in the interview that I was the least qualified applicant in terms of experience, but I was also the only applicant that hadn't bounced from job to job in the industry.

Is it perfect? It's been two years and I'll admit a part of me misses the lack of physical labour in my old job. Especially since I'm getting old. But my insomnia is gone. I haven't had a dream where I'm at work, and that used to happen all the time. I'm now married and much happier in life. So, while it isn't my dream job by any means, my quality of life is definetly much better.
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Emachine9643: I like pretty much everything but don't feel a passion or drive towards a particular thing. Now I'm thinking of picking up an easy trade just so I have a few extra bucks in my pocket.
How does money help make you happier?

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Emachine9643: Theres more but can't remember and no real pattern to what I like.
It's fine to like many things. You could be a jack of all trades master of none.
Not sure if this helps you out much at all, but if it does, here's some solid advice for you. If you stop letting yourself get pigeonholed by other people into doing things you're not 100% happy with, you're going to be a heck of a lot more fulfilled in your life.

Twenty years ago, I would have NEVER considered the service industry to be my actual love, and even though I'm currently on sabbatical from it, my ultimate goal is to go back as soon as I have the scratch to open my OWN little bar and restaurant.

It also gave me tools that allowed me plenty of opportunities to advance myself in my current job, like the ability to deal pleasantly with difficult decisions, a diverse array of personality types and a lot of personal fulfillment in a job that I would have never expected to come back to and hated while I did it the first time. (Factory work.)

Sure, building dryers ain't glamorous or earth changing, but I've learned that it's less about the work and more about the people, and how rewarding it can be to cultivate different skills. If, at 36 years of age, I can go back to the drawing board and learn new things, so can you. My best friend just recently got his degree in business, and he's 40. I couldn't be more proud of him for going back to school and actually sticking it out.

Set some goals and persevere, man. I'm sure you'll be fine. :)
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Falci: So, I’m 10 years into my career as a software developer and just found out that I actually don’t like software development. So much, in fact, that it is ruining me at the place I work, which is as great a place, team and project to work as I ever could wish for.

I decided to start this thread as a means to let out my frustration and review my history. And also hear opinions from people who aren’t my psychologist or my closest friends.

Back in 2001, I was trying to choose a college and course to go through, and I had a strong inclination towards Computer Science or Computer Engineering, mostly because I was interested in game development. There weren’t any courses in the specific subject of game development at the time here in Brazil, but they started popping up a few years later.

Anyway, I let my father slightly push me into taking a course in Electrical Engineering focused mostly in Telecommunications, though there was some software development to learn in it as well. I ended up taking a few opportunities to focus on that (software development) through my college years and, finally, mid 2006, my last year in college, I got an internship as a programmer in a project at Unicamp.

(Also, of note, is that I don’t regret my time at college or taking that specific course. It was interesting, though, ultimately, something I never wanted to work with)

The Unicamp project also enabled me to start a mastery course, this time, in computer engineering specifically. By this time I had become disillusioned from game development mostly due to reading on magazines how it was entirely based around working your ass to the ground and being awfully paid. I also had met a friend who tried that experience first hand and could confirm its awfulness.

I took from 2007 to 2010 to finish the mastery course (mostly due to my work at the lab being completely unrelated to my thesis work and, now thinking in retrospect, not really liking the subject at all).

Mid 2010, thanks to my thesis subject (data mining) and a college friend, I was offered a position at Telefonica. Now, I met many great fellows and many assholes there. There were good and awful times and places to be there. Let’s just say that I learned and understood the origin and reasoning behind every cliché about life as a corporate worker at Telefonica.

I spent most of my time there automating reports and building web-based control systems (so that people could keep a registry of anything they needed to track, like repair-jobs performed on sites, etc).

When I was fired, mid 2014, by an asshole whom the only thing I had in common with was the fact that neither of us knew why the fuck I was pushed into his team, I was already utterly depressed and hopeless. I knew I had to quit, but I didn’t really know where to look for a new job, nor had I the energy to do so.

(I never considered suicide, in case any of you are wondering. But I did come to understand why people are driven to it.)

That improved my life a bit and spending a few months at home doing whatever I wanted really helped. My daughter had recently been born as well, so I could enjoy being with her more.

Finally, I got into my current job.

It was a somewhat difficult start, but things eventually reshaped and got into what they are today, or rather, were at the start of the year: I was a software developer working on automating cell phone testing batteries. The team is great, the boss is as good a leader (and person) as I could ever wish for and I can’t really remember a single time we developed anything that was abandoned and not put to good use.

So it was utterly soul crushing that I couldn’t keep up.

I entered a cycle of ups and downs, usually having my boss chastise me in between. I’d be given a new task, code some of the tests and, then, progressively slow down to a crawl, losing all steam while at it. My boss subtly tried to test me with the effectively-running-the-tests side of things, but that didn’t really work out as well.

Finally, two things happened: I began treatment with a psychologist and, a few weeks later, my boss moved me into a screening team.

The screening thing consists of looking into a series of problem reports automatically generated and deciding what are real problems and what are not. It’s hard as nails to learn, but once you get a hang of it, it’s mostly repetitive, soulless work.

Somehow, I can keep up with this thing, enough to take my boss out of my neck. It was supposed to be temporary, but ultimately she told me I’d have to earn my place back with the development team otherwise I’d remain there. She did offer me the opportunities, I simply didn’t embrace them and recently she closed the doors on said opportunities (she assigned other people to the coding tasks she wanted me to perform).

This made me feel irrelevant to my team and even more discouraged. I realised I’m effectively hiding in that very repetitive, soulless work so that my boss won’t chastise me and leave me be.

On the therapy side of things, my psychologist opted to focus on my personal problems first and only about a month ago we began to focus on my professional life.

But she did tell me early on: you don’t like what you do for a living.

This stuck with me, because when I look back, I really don’t like it. And it took me 10 (15) fucking years to realise it!

I took a couple of aptitude/personality tests, and it seems that I’m really not fit for software programming or engineering at all (a shame, really, I do take pride in being an engineer).

Among my resulting possible career paths are:
* Accounting
* Administration
* Economy
* International Relations (this is the career of one my sisters, actually)
* Journalism
* Law
* Pedagogy
* Publicity and Advertising

All of these require years of study to get me into and none struck me a chord. I know how I can relate to some of them (as in how my personal habits and interests can explain to me these aptitudes in a general way), but that doesn’t really makes it easy for me to choose. I do like writing, specially fiction, but I’m yet to finish and publish something, though I have been writing a bit more regularly recently.

Anyway, that’s it. I could add a multitude of other details, but they’d add little to the overall story. For anyone who read it all: thank you for paying attention. I appreciate that.
The first thing I tell folks is:. Who do you want to be?

Spend some time with that.

Your profession is important, but not anywhere near as important as who you are.

Sometimes you just have to work a job. And that's jus how it is. Bit often, if you're not enjoying yourself, it's because of the people around you.

I've worked fast food on multiple places, a few movie theaters, a few jobs at a college, and several hospitals. My day to day function wasnt always the most fun (it is work), but being with great people is what made the job awesome.

Read "who took my cheese," update your resume, and stop being held hostage to lousy bosses and a life-stealing environment.

Good luck on your next adventure!
If you worship money and like fooking people over then go be a lawyer.
Fooking?

Shit, I can't find my 'Deauchbag to English Dictionary'. Can someone tell me what that means?
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Strijkbout: Do realize most people hate their jobs
^
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tinyE: Fooking?

Shit, I can't find my 'Deauchbag to English Dictionary'. Can someone tell me what that means?
I was a fookin legend!
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tinyE: Fooking?

Shit, I can't find my 'Deauchbag to English Dictionary'. Can someone tell me what that means?
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Nirth: I was a fookin legend!
Jaime fookin Lannister!
I agree with the people who say that most people hate their jobs. I think it's fairly common if you work for others (unless you have a great boss) to hate your job.

I also agree with those who suggest going into business yourself. It's the best thing I ever did. Working for yourself is brilliant, freeing and inevitably involves doing something you love (because why go into business doing something you hate?)

Failing that, a cabin in the woods and donkeys sounds good too.
A lot of those skills you can use in other jobs, you could probably make better money just designing websites for people. You should look into it.
high rated
DON'T GO INTO JOURNALISM!!!!

The industry is collapsing.

The old newspapers still haven't figured out how to properly monetize web content, and aside from a few very small companies, no one has figured out how to monetize local news. And make no mistake, local news is what you're going to be doing when you're starting out.

Or if you want to be, say, a tech journalist, you'll have to work your way up as a freelancer, amass clips and contacts, and eat ramen noodles for a few years until you get a staff job making probably half of what you made as a software engineer.

Or if pop culture, movies and games are your thing, you'll be wading into an ultra-competitive market and almost certainly have to start out as a freelancer. But even if you get a staff job, you're not going to make money -- "famous" game journalists front like they're pros, but most of them earn about $40k a year.

And even if you're incredibly successful and move up quickly, the sad truth is that almost everything is now journalism-by-pageview, which means there are no standards, no integrity, and no actual reporting -- most of it's just aggregating content from aggregated sources that aggregated the story from somewhere else. It's a wonder original content still exists for all these sites to keep stealing from.

So even if you get what you think is an awesome job, you're not going to be interviewing people, or visiting interesting places, or learning new things -- you are going to be tethered to a desk and tasked with relentlessly pumping out content. When your job involves writing 5 to 10 stories a day, you will have no time to do anything resembling journalism.

You'll also more than likely answer to some editor who has no formal journalism training and is only interested in what's going viral, so you'll be forced to write stories like: "OMG Look At The Smile On This Woman's Face After A Little Girl Helped Carry Her Groceries," or "Teens Messed With The Wrong Homeless Man, And THIS Happened," or "You Won't Believe What This Waitress Said To A Customer Who Left A Nasty Note On The Check."

Absolute, soul-crushing garbage.

I've been a journalist for more than 10 years -- first as a general assignment and crime reporter for a big regional daily, then as an editor with AOL during the HuffPo acquisition days, and then as a crime reporter at one of the last few great, Pulitzer-winning newspapers in the country.

I thrived in that last job and loved it, and my editors really appreciated my work, but the company closed down my entire division and I was left without a job. Now I work for a web content company participating in a pilot program with Facebook to deliver news directly via the platform, without requiring users to click out to external sites.

If this was a rewarding field once, it's not anymore. Worse, for someone like me, employers do not seem to value traditional journalism skills like knowing how to interview people, how to tease out details from reluctant sources, how to sniff out corruption and scandals, how to mine databases to find trends and data-driven stories, and how to go about the job with professionalism and dignity.

Please don't go into journalism. You deserve better than that.
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Crewdroog: Be glad you figured it out. now, you can start a new chapter (oh god that's so cliche) in your life. Some people never realize this and are miserable until the day they die.
This is so true. You realized you had a problem, and that problem seems to be (at least partially) identified. This makes a world of difference.