Poll: Snow change

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IronDuke

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Oct 5, 2008
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Something I've been thinking about lately;

Say you have alot going for you at home; nearly finished your degree with an almost certainty of a high paying job and stable life. But you don't have a passion for what you are working towards and can't seem to find a proffessional passion, or indeed, you downright hate what you are studying and it is eating at you (my case). The other problem is this city seems to be so downright boring, im going out of my mind just waiting for the repetition; uni/work all week then get drunk out of my brains on the weekend and lie on the beach during the day. Sounds alright, and it is, but it gets as boring as hell after a while.

And there is an idea of, instead of working to holiday (among other things), you think of the few places you would love to spend an extended holiday, and then live there, or rotate working in several places you love and back home for holidays, not for a high paying job, but just one that can make you enough to get by and then a little more and you get to enjoy the place you would otherwise only see once a year at the sacrifice of perhaps respect from your family or a lack of financial certainty and assets for when you finally go back to living in the 9-5 world.

Would you stick with your career (that you do not love) direction permanently, keep going while trying to find another thing that drives you, or bite the bullet and drop it all for the change?

If so where would you work if you could choose two places (5-6 months spent in each per year)?

Seriously considering it, and have taken time off uni to try out snowboarding for a season. I've looked and looked, and no area of study really excites me enough to make me happy.

I suppose on a similar note, ive also been thinking about degrees of wealth compared to happiness. I think I prefer to live in a small, maybe an apartment, rather than a big house. But maybe you have to start with money to see that it isn't everything. In any case, give me internet access, snowy mountains and a friend and I think I'd be in heaven.
 

Jamanticus

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Sep 7, 2008
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Ahh, a thread I can relate to quite well. I've always aspired to be a musician (since I was 7), which is not only an absurdly competitive profession, but also is generally not-all-that-high-paying.

The reason I choose to go for it, however, is that I know I wouldn't be happy doing anything else.

Now, in regards to the scenarios you suggested, I say to keep going in your current direction until you find something else you really, really love. As long as you have a deep-seated passion for the thing you want to go for, you'll most likely be successful at whatever it is you choose to do, and you will enjoy it immensely.

Now, I'm quite inexperienced in all of this, so take my advice with several shakers of salt, but remember the saying, "A man who does what he loves for a living never has to work a day in his life."
 

IronDuke

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Oct 5, 2008
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Well this thread didnt really work :S

Jamanticus, I knew a guy alot like you where I work, he was there for 10 years- smart guy, gone to uni and all but didnt want to give up his dream of doing what he loved (music). It finally paid off and he got a record out and touring and stuff.

So anyone else got thoughts on the whole working for little pay, much enjoyment? What about doing fun jobs like a jet ski instructor or something, not just location.
 

Omnidum

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Mar 27, 2008
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Well, because of the adaptability of the Danish education, I'm going towards I love anyway. I plan on being a game designer in the graphics department, and failing that, website designer. But still, you can make life unwinnable if you choose the wrong things over here.
 

742

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Sep 8, 2008
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well, if you can survive doing what you love, sure, why not. but just find something you love first, til then perhaps consider some degree of compromise, a career you dont absolutely love in a location that you do.