|
Re: I'm ill enough to just straight-up diss you for no reason
06/20/14 05:43 AM
|
|
|
> 2) If you don't like your developer job, get another one. There's tons out there. If > there aren't tons where you are, move. Keep trying until you find a job you don't > hate. You don't need to love or even like your job. If it pays well and you don't > hate it, you're doing good. Also, the average duration at a single company for and IT > worker is around 3 years. You should expect to start to feel the itch to find a new > job around the 3 year mark.
Fuck it, I'm going to hate any job that has anything to do with software or finance. I've spent over a decade becoming very good at something I hate doing. Hence I will do something else, I just need to work out what. If I end up hating it, I can try something else again.
> 3) If at all possible, get into some form of government contracting, either at the > state or federal level. The contracts can be really unstable, but they normally pay > you enough that you can bank a good chunk of it so you can ride out the inevitable > government shutdown and congressional sequesters or whatever.
Fuck no! Government projects are the height of mediocrity. I know a bunch of people who do this, and they're exactly the kind of people I don't want to work with. Also doesn't pay as much as finance anyway.
> 5) The most powerful thing you can do is be debt free. Zero debt plus money in the > bank equals power. The power to say "fuck you" and quit your job whenever you want. > To take a job because you WANT a job, not because you NEED a job. In your early > years, work hard to pay off your student loans. If you buy a car, buy a used one and > pay cash. Move somewhere where property taxes are low and homes are reasonably > priced. Buy a smaller house than you need and make it work. Don't buy a house until > you can put down at least 20% and then make extra payments to get it paid off as soon > as possible. Be thrifty. Live frugal. Get roommates and share living expenses. Don't > piss away money going to the movies, or on expensive cable packages.
Already debt free with a pile of cash and the deed to an apartment. No cable TV, in fact I don't even waste my time on free to air TV (did get a Wii U for the wife and kids, though). My electricity usage is so low that the service provision fee is higher than the usage charges.
|
|