Just stay debt free besides a mortgage or truck payment. Life will be great!
But... if you have to work long hours on a regular basis it'd be nearly impossible to have any spare time. For example, if you have to work until 1am everyday with no days off, you wouldn't probably have enough time to even wash your face imho. Just as I said a million times before, money is the last thing that matters to young people. Therefore I'd rather take a job that doesn't pay well but allows me sufficient spare time to continue my study on what I'm really interested in.
I totally agree on the marriage part though. I love the Lunar Goddess and she's the one I want to get married to in the future, but not the present time or anytime soon. I'll always adhere to the Tom Leykis doctrine which tells us never to get married before the age of 30, so that I think LG and I will have to wait until at least I hit the 30 mark imho (she'll be 28 then), and a 3yr something relationship sounds like the right length of preparation before marriage tbh.
There ain't many mentors in the real world imho, some posters here can be your mentors online (like DMC) but it all ends in the virtual world. People in the real life are mean and selfish, and most of them wouldn't help you for nothing.
And I don't think it right to take a job you dislike no matter how much it pays. The first job is very important for college graduates imho, to some extent it'll set the basic direction of your career path. If you choose the wrong job/career it'll take you many years to fix it, and it'd turn out particularly costly when you're already in your mid 20s. I don't wanna define which career is good or which else is bad, it pretty much depends on one's personal preference and characteristics imho. You're lucky enough if you find a job that suits you well, regardless of the pay. Teaching at college is the best type of job for her, and maybe also for me as well, but she changed her mind somehow (most likely because she knew she would get that offer from PwC). It may sound cool to work at PwC but that's probably not the right job for her tbh, especially when she knows basically nothing about accounting or auditing. It sounds weird enough when someone gets hired at PwC with only an English degree, right? Grassroot white collars are just urban mules, glorified slaves tbh. We had the chance to work together at a private college, we could've both signed there and purchased a small row house nearby, but she seemed to have much higher ambitions and I have to respect her decisions...
Just stay debt free besides a mortgage or truck payment. Life will be great!
student loans will always be ing you in the ass. don't go to grad school if you don't have to.
Amen.
Mine is highly variable in time but I love it.
Life is too short.
Same. But my job description changes every day so it'll never really be monotonous.
and really, the people you work with matter just as much, if not more than your actual job imo. if you hate your job, it could be very well the assholes you have to be around all day rather than what you do.
My occupation partially involves getting people who are very bright to realize they don't know everything. Like a translator between people with large egos that do different things. I meet new folks like this constantly so it's a fun challenge. And when we solve something it's an absolute joy, almost like a team has come together. Sometimes it involves repair work afterwards though, feelings can get hurt.
To the OP I would reiterate, be very good at what you do. And be prepared to put something on the line, be willing to take a loss(not necessarily financial) to get it out that you are good at what you do. Sacrifice short term loses for long term gains.
The big unknown however is just damn good luck imo. I fell into a situation in which money was involved and I loved it. And in science. These two things, $ and love of the job, don't necessarily go together. And be ready to evolve with the changes that come. If you can't grow with the job, or the job does not require growth, I can see boredom setting in.
Luck, timing and falling into the right spot are definitely in play though.
If you're working a job and you have no days off... you should quit. Unless its your own company. You will burn out... even if its something you love. If college is the route you're taking then put it first, and work second. Find a way... live at home with your parents or a family member. Get a group of like minded friends or strangers and rent a house. No job is worth all your time.
You pass mentors every single day... open your eyes and start talking to people... total strangers if you have to. True story... I made plans to go to this corporate credit building seminar years ago. I had in my mind that I was tired of working for someone else so I will build a load of corporate credit and use the credit to gamble on a business idea. I didn't even have a business idea at the time. I just knew that I had to leave my job. I show up to the hotel about two hours early due to LA traffic being so bad in the morning so I decide to have some breakfast at Denny's. As I'm sitting there passing time I see this short, red headed white dude pull up in his Lamborghini. He comes in and they sit him across from me. I look at him and nod... he does the same thing. But the whole time I'm thinking how in the does he afford a Lambo. So I simply said, "Excuse me sir... you mind me asking what you do for a living?" He goes... "I teach people how to tell their boss to off." So I said, "you work for the people that's giving the seminar?" He says, "I am the seminar."
Now I had gone to a few seminars before and they always try to sell you some overpriced that's skimmed down to the bare basics. You eventually wind up paying much more money to get to the meat of the program. So I said to the guy, "Do you mind if I just pay you directly to teach me how to build corporate credit instead of dealing with the people that work for you?" He started laughing, gave me his business card and introduced himself as Ray Reynolds. I tried to get all of my close friends and family members to follow me, but not one of them followed. I would show up at this guys office and ask for Ray directly... so all of his employees thought I knew him personally. I basically could get whatever I wanted... as far as the programs they offered. Three months in he told me to quit my job and get an insurance license and sell mortgages. I had no experience in either, but I did it. This was in 2002... and anyone that was in real estate during that time can tell you how much money we made. That total stranger became a mentor and changed my life. I made so much money... we worked hard long hours for great commission checks. Fly to Vegas every Friday on private planes to party. We'd rent yachts... go on cruises... go to Cabo, you name it we did it. The market crashed in 2007, but I made so much money and learned so much during that span that I haven't punched a clock for work since 2007. ... I didn't have to work at all for two years... I rode the recession out on my savings alone. From 2007 till 2010 I spent most of my time online ing with you guys, and networking with people about different business ideas.
Seminars... social groups... and charities are great places to meet mentors. Find someone that is successful... and they will be glad to bestow their wisdom on you. As far as taking a job you don't like because the money is good... you have to realize that at every single job you have trade-offs. Sometimes you have to do things that you don't like to get the things that you want. When I left my job back in 2002... I wanted to leave on good terms just in case I needed to come back. I was a manager, so I went into the GM's office to give him two weeks notice. He looked at me like he was jealous. He told me he wished he could do what I was doing. I said... you make a quarter of a million a year, and you have it made. He said, that's true but I would like to work for myself and start my own company, but he had a wife and kids, and private school to pay for.
As I was typing this I had to stop and take a call from my nephew. He's a lazy loser and wants me to donate him some money. Of course I said no, but offer to help him find a job. Here he has an uncle that's willing to help him, but he's lazy and hates to listen. Remove the thought from your mind that successful people don't want to help you. It's just the opposite. Go to the book store and you'll see its filled with stories of successful people sharing their life's stories. You just need to pick one.![]()
Thanks for sharing with us your experience of success, bro. I'd like to continue my study but it's very difficult to obtain Doctorate's candidacy at this point of time, and I don't wanna continue living on my parents' income so I have to find a job first. A college job is most desirable for me because if I get a job elsewhere it'd be nearly impossible for me to get back to school since most employers wouldn't give you so much time off for Doctorate's study. By working at school I'd at least have the summer vacation guaranteed, and the school timetable is very flexible imho.
I think I have also come across some good successful people, they were very kind to me and they gave me some honest advice. They could've become mentors to me but I just didn't go any further with them, just casually talked with them and all. I'm luckier than most of my classmates nonetheless, because I've got a good professor who can be regarded as a mentor of mine. He picked me out of the crowed and brought me under his guidance about the same time last year. I'm a bit introvert so I'm not really good at communicating with people, which even led to some sort of misunderstanding between me and my professor. For example, he knew that I had a crush on Lunar Goddess so he must have thought that I had been dating her (and he's a strong disapprover of such school love tbh), but in fact I've only seen her twice since July last year... It all has been resolved, I think. He's still very kind to me imho, and I'll ask him for some help concerning the application for college jobs. Only with his help can I land such a job tbh, due to the severe nepotism in this area. Even though you're more than qualified you still need the help of some senior professor in this field in order to get a job here, it's just the shameful fact about these chinese schools tbh.
Many people may become your mentors and you just need to pick one, and I think I've already picked one that is my professor. Some of my peers have already found jobs in such profitable sectors such as banking, finance, accounting etc... but I'd rather stick to my profession and professor. I'm not sure if he can really help me achieve this goal but he's the only one I can count on tbh, so I have to trust him and cling to him. A good job comes with myriad opportunities and it's surely worth more than a static amount of money, so yet it's very dumb of your nephew take the latter over a job opportunity. I'm kinda used to living a frugal life, and my living cost is near zero because I live with my parents so there's no financial trouble for me to worry about. I'd rather take a job that suits me well and that can keep my dreams alive, than sell myself to a profitable industry and convert all my time and brain into the form of money.
What do you do?
20 hours a week if I'm feeling good
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