Hey bcjammerx,
"The trick is finding something I like and that will pay...well that's the trick for me anyway...shouldn't be so damn tricky... it is for me I don't know... "
Amen! You need to love your work. You need to love your work so much that you don't mind doing it after hours, at home, or on your days off. Don't commit to a long-term job that pays good $ but that you do not like (like i did, haha).
I'm 31 and I've been in the IT field for 14 years now. My g/f works as a nurse. I'm making about $45,000 and she is making about $43,000.
The thing is that I got into IT because I thought this is where the $ would be. I was right. But now I hate my jobs. I've had worse, and I've had better but before the IT World I was in to music (for 6 years) and had to leave that world because there was no $ in it. As soon as I needed rent$, and bill$, etc, the money I was making from playing gigs was not enough. Before this transisition I did:
(played music and did gigs while doing these jobs):
- Carpet and flooring installer
- Dish washer
- Pizza maker
- Furniture mover
- Demolition
- Carpenter/Construction worker
(went to school for IT Network Administrator / Computer Administrator)
(sit on my ass all day and do):
- Call center idiot
- LAN administrator
- IT technical support specialist for a school board
- ISP support specialist (hosting websites, DNS, etc)
- Webpage making
- IT Technological Advisor
The physical jobs were hard on the body and the mental jobs are hard on the head (stressful). The physical jobs suck because you are out in the cold and snow trying to shingle a roof all day and your fingers may stop working. The mental jobs suck because you have to talk to idiots all day and you don't get enough exercise. There is a freedom in physical work, which is leading me back into a LAN administrator type of job where I will at least get to carry computers around while setting them up.
The best advise I can give you is to think back to when you a kid, what did you do or like doing. Reading, taking things apart, outside, inside, tools or cooking??
Personally I always liked music, but I may have to make this a hobbie rather than profession. (I remember being 11 and trading my sweater for a drum pad my friend had).
Best of luck though.
"The trick is finding something I like and that will pay...well that's the trick for me anyway...shouldn't be so damn tricky... it is for me I don't know... "
Amen! You need to love your work. You need to love your work so much that you don't mind doing it after hours, at home, or on your days off. Don't commit to a long-term job that pays good $ but that you do not like (like i did, haha).
I'm 31 and I've been in the IT field for 14 years now. My g/f works as a nurse. I'm making about $45,000 and she is making about $43,000.
The thing is that I got into IT because I thought this is where the $ would be. I was right. But now I hate my jobs. I've had worse, and I've had better but before the IT World I was in to music (for 6 years) and had to leave that world because there was no $ in it. As soon as I needed rent$, and bill$, etc, the money I was making from playing gigs was not enough. Before this transisition I did:
(played music and did gigs while doing these jobs):
- Carpet and flooring installer
- Dish washer
- Pizza maker
- Furniture mover
- Demolition
- Carpenter/Construction worker
(went to school for IT Network Administrator / Computer Administrator)
(sit on my ass all day and do):
- Call center idiot
- LAN administrator
- IT technical support specialist for a school board
- ISP support specialist (hosting websites, DNS, etc)
- Webpage making
- IT Technological Advisor
The physical jobs were hard on the body and the mental jobs are hard on the head (stressful). The physical jobs suck because you are out in the cold and snow trying to shingle a roof all day and your fingers may stop working. The mental jobs suck because you have to talk to idiots all day and you don't get enough exercise. There is a freedom in physical work, which is leading me back into a LAN administrator type of job where I will at least get to carry computers around while setting them up.
The best advise I can give you is to think back to when you a kid, what did you do or like doing. Reading, taking things apart, outside, inside, tools or cooking??
Personally I always liked music, but I may have to make this a hobbie rather than profession. (I remember being 11 and trading my sweater for a drum pad my friend had).
Best of luck though.
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