there's no light at the end of the tunnel...
... but i hear the train coming anyway.
My career is stuck in a bad spot, where i can't afford to work for a place whose output isn't objectionable (like a university or a non-profit organization), so i have to take a job with companies that produce abhorrent things, like social networks or online ad frameworks, and are either megacorporations ridden with politics and bureaucracy, or are minuscule startups run by delusional megalomaniacs who overwork everyone, or they're midsized companies run by decent, smart people and therefore are a target ripe for acquisition and reëducation. And i'm still too far off my winemaking certificate to seriously enact a career change (and we're back to the "can't afford" part, anyway). The small business is already a vanishing thing, but it's practically mythic in this industry. I wonder whether there's anything that can be done about it.
no subject
no subject
Best of luck on the search and keep an open mind. Things aren't always as dead-end as they appear.
no subject
Hope you find something that won't drive you crazy yet pays the bills.
no subject
The interpersonal politics are worst in nonprofit and public sector. By a whole lot.
But look at the bright side - at least you're not in the midwest doing IT support for heavy industry.
Some recruiter just knocked on my inbox last week, asking me to relocate to Los Angeles to do server adminstration, DBA, application architecture, interface design, and programming for a four-man startup with a guaranteed-winner social networking concept. Apparently the guys they already have on staff are too busy contemplating their visions to implement anything. It's not often I laugh as I bin the junkmail. I'm not in the best place right now but it's better than that.
Best of luck. Keep your sense of humor - it'll help you spot the real traps.
(no subject)
no subject
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
no subject
It could be worse. You could, say, have moral reservations about working on things that kill people, and live in a town full of defense contractors. There's less and less out there that isn't encumbered with some sort of contract with Satan.
I just finished three years working on software that hires astronauts, and government bureaucrats who conspire to fling astronauts into the interplanetary void. That would facially seem to be at least not completely revulsive, but professionally speaking, they were the three most unpleasant years of my life.
The formula for career satisfaction that I've heard from happy people is: find the thing you're passionate about, and dive into it despite the looming short-term penury. It sounds like you've found that thing. Some of us are still looking for it.
There's not that much out there that you ABSOLUTELY HAVE TO go to school to do. Bill Gates STILL doesn't have a bachelor's degree.
(no subject)
no subject
I've had some pretty abhorent jobs in the past, including doing layouts on instruction manuals (in Chinese) for army telecommuniation equipment that was being sent to Taiwan.
no subject
Still, I did get to clickety-clock a couple hundred thousand users today. Cheered me right up, that did.
(no subject)
no subject
(no subject)
(no subject)
no subject
I figure as long as I'm not actively contributing to harming people, I can put in my time, collect my paycheck, and go about enjoying my personal life.
no subject
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
no subject
The game my cousin is playing is to find the least objectionable of the former that's also the most likely to turn into the latter over the course of the next year or three, and then when they get all re-education-ey, blow out of there in a flurry of receipts for dumped stock options and share buyouts.
If he wins two more rounds of this game, he's gonna have enough money to retire. ...in his forties.
Me, I don't gamble, and I don't mind soul-destroying stupidity all that much so long as the mortgage gets paid. That's why I work for the government.
no subject
Okay, finish the shuddering, but if you consider things in terms of end product being interesting comms services rather than bloodsucking death, they typically have massives budgets, all the good toys, reasonable job security and don't mind paying people properly. The politics etc exist, but I got three good years out of a telco before I got particularly annoyed.
I found my career niche working for a Sun reseller handling deployments, design and general 'doing things' type work. Minimal politics, maximal variety of workload and the pay isn't too shabby.
no subject