How did you choose your occpuation for people who didn"t just follow thier passion
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As some with ADHD, my interest fluantuats wildly. How does an average person choose a job thats suppose to be for life and not worry about loss of interest, let alone some with ADHD.
wrote last edited by [email protected]Job hopped until I settled into something I finally enjoy.
I highly recommend making a good impression and being a team player. About half of my jobs came from recommendations from people I had worked with at other jobs.
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Yup, its pretty straightforward. Biggest thing holding me back IMO is lack of foundational knowledge of both scripting logic and networking. I can do CLI interaction just fine but trying to write out a cohesive script I just fall flat on my face. In my last job everyone could (and did) script circles around me.
The advice I have on the scripting practice is to just do home lab stuff. A bucket of pis or a few VMs to get something working where your not afraid to break things. (Im not good at it either, but practice is the key takeaway).
As for the networking, they got certs for that, and said home lab will make applying your new skills easier until you find them relavent for an employer.
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As some with ADHD, my interest fluantuats wildly. How does an average person choose a job thats suppose to be for life and not worry about loss of interest, let alone some with ADHD.
I guess I kind of got lucky.
I always liked computers, and I like solving problems. Got hired as a database administrator for a small research center in a large university.
I've changed jobs a couple times over the years (decades, actually). As it turns out, computer nerds who like to solve problems are valuable, and I've been generally left alone to solve problems ever since.
Current leadership team doesn't want to solve problems or work more efficiently now because if you depend on one person to make the team more efficient, and that one person leaves, you'll have to hire someone to replace him.
So instead, you just hire 10 people for the same pay to do the extra work they have to do when you don't have someone making everything easier.
Oh well.
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Dropped out of college. Parents said DO SOMETHING OR MOVE OUT. I needed the whip cracked in all fairness. Went to school to become a stengroapher. Burned through the program, been doing it for 17 years now.
I was more concerned about AI before AI really showed up, and now I'm okay.
I was more concerned about AI before AI really showed up, and now I'm okay.
HA!
"Oh no! AI is gonna replace us!"
"Here's the AI."
"Um... Ok, never mind. I'm fine."
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As some with ADHD, my interest fluantuats wildly. How does an average person choose a job thats suppose to be for life and not worry about loss of interest, let alone some with ADHD.
Mostly due to necessity but my wife told me I should consider psychology so I'm now in training to work in the field. I think I'm a natural at talk-therapy, at least compared to most other things I've tried, lol, so I can only thank her for the recommendation and support. It was either that or philosophy, but I couldn't properly think on how to monetize it.
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Dropped out of college. Parents said DO SOMETHING OR MOVE OUT. I needed the whip cracked in all fairness. Went to school to become a stengroapher. Burned through the program, been doing it for 17 years now.
I was more concerned about AI before AI really showed up, and now I'm okay.
Where do you live? Even 20 years ago we used digital recordings when I worked for a provincial court here in Canada.
Stenographers aren't really a thing here anymore.
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As some with ADHD, my interest fluantuats wildly. How does an average person choose a job thats suppose to be for life and not worry about loss of interest, let alone some with ADHD.
I've always enjoyed computers. Said I didn't want to do it for work, because it would make it less fun.
I was actively looking at becoming a paramedic when I got a job working with IT because it came easy and natural to me. I've been doing it for years now. I don't find it nearly as entertaining as I used to, but I'll admit that's not because of work. I'd rather just work on cars all day as a hobby instead. Or sewing or embroidery.
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Where do you live? Even 20 years ago we used digital recordings when I worked for a provincial court here in Canada.
Stenographers aren't really a thing here anymore.
I live in New Jersey, and there is tons of work available. There are certain courts, like municipal court, that use recordings, and mainly because 99% of the time nobody will ever go back to see what was said. Majority of my work is pretrial depositions, some EUOs, and I also do land use boards (which frequently end up in court). NJ loves court.
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As some with ADHD, my interest fluantuats wildly. How does an average person choose a job thats suppose to be for life and not worry about loss of interest, let alone some with ADHD.
Took apart a computer that I didn’t own… said “oh shit, I gotta put this back together and make sure it works!”. Put it back together, it worked. 30+ years later… I work in the computer industry.
Separate what makes you money and your ability to support yourself from what makes your life worth living. Two massively different concepts!
Good luck!!
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stay focused
Yeah, you know. They’re very intelligent, they just need to apply themselves.
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As some with ADHD, my interest fluantuats wildly. How does an average person choose a job thats suppose to be for life and not worry about loss of interest, let alone some with ADHD.
I was very lucky. I got my diagnosis at age 44, right when I started figuring out I was good at identifying and resolving process gaps. With meds, I found out I was really good at it, as well as rapidly understanding very complex processes, and being able to explain them to different parties. Suddenly I oversee a bunch of data architects and software engineers who do file ingestion and data analysis. And without me, they function like a squabbling kindergarten, if they function at all.
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As some with ADHD, my interest fluantuats wildly. How does an average person choose a job thats suppose to be for life and not worry about loss of interest, let alone some with ADHD.
I just always followed my passion: IT. But I really don't work well in groups or with someone above me so I rarely did that. So basically I retired somewhere in my 20s, which already was over 20yrs ago. Since then I live ny passion at home, tinkering with my servers, smart home and just general coding. Rest of the time I enjoy with wifey and travel. Guess I'm one of the luckier ones.
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As some with ADHD, my interest fluantuats wildly. How does an average person choose a job thats suppose to be for life and not worry about loss of interest, let alone some with ADHD.
My adhd was mostly untreated til about a couple years ago, and I was tryna get into film or TV production, but indecision paralysis hindered me 6 ways til Sunday, and being diabetic was also a major hurdle cause I needed good insurance. Thankfully my dad was a union electrician so I got into that easily. But I couldn't handle construction and quit after 3 months. Then I went into something more residential, but injured my wrist. Luckily they let me do dispatch and other desk job stuff there and I just kinda stayed, cause going to one location and staying there really worked out for me.
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As some with ADHD, my interest fluantuats wildly. How does an average person choose a job thats suppose to be for life and not worry about loss of interest, let alone some with ADHD.
I needed a stable job so. And it was the easiest way to get it.
After I chose to follow my passion and started working on that, which is my current job. Just to find out that not because you work in your passion your job is going to be fun.
Then I realized than a job is a job. And most jobs are shitty. So I focused on working as little hours as possible and just enjoy my hobbies.
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As some with ADHD, my interest fluantuats wildly. How does an average person choose a job thats suppose to be for life and not worry about loss of interest, let alone some with ADHD.
Tried to become a philosophy professor but couldn't get funding for my PhD - needed another 5% on my grades to get a distinction at MSc level to achieve that.
While studying philosophy I'd got interested in FOSS and Linux so I was vaguely aware that I found computers interesting. It turned out there was Scottish government funding for doing a MSc in Computing without needing to have done a relevant undergrad (Computer Science would have required a related UG degree).
Became a dev after doing the MSc Computing. Was a junior for 1 year then left that company and moved to another one at mid-level, where I realised I enjoyed the data related tasks. Promoted to senior after 3 years there. Also became aware Data Engineers got paid more than regular engineers.
Moved to my current company as a mid-level Data Engineer and recently became a Senior Data Engineer. Not 100% sure how it all happened given I've never been particularly good at maths however philosophy has a lot of problem solving/discrete mathematics type puzzles involved so that probably helped.
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As some with ADHD, my interest fluantuats wildly. How does an average person choose a job thats suppose to be for life and not worry about loss of interest, let alone some with ADHD.
Not every job is a great fit for someone with ADHD, but some of that is a learning curve as well. If you're worried about it I'd recommend looking into the kinds of work that are more hands on, active, and varied.
Beyond that, you don't choose a job for life. You don't even necessarily choose an industry for life. Most people will change jobs, industries, even entire careers once or twice. I'd expect people with ADHD probably more so.
You look for something that aligns pretty well with what you want, while doing that you figure out what parts of it you're good at or you like, then down the line you steer your career in a direction that aligns more with those things. You do that two or three times and you end up with a fulfilling career you may not have known existed at the outset.
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As some with ADHD, my interest fluantuats wildly. How does an average person choose a job thats suppose to be for life and not worry about loss of interest, let alone some with ADHD.
Looked up which were the highest paying jobs for people not inheriting wealth or social connections. Realized the field was oil & gas and the highest job was Petroleum Engineer, took Chemical Engineering because of its wide applicability, accepted I'd be working in the boonies for at least a decade of my life, made it work.
5/10. Wouldn't recommend for the loneliness.
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I'm looking for a second non-career (slave) job to do to fill in gaps when I can't find a job in my career. Can you think of any slave jobs where you can progress in the skill to be paid better?
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I'm looking for a second non-career (slave) job to do to fill in gaps when I can't find a job in my career. Can you think of any slave jobs where you can progress in the skill to be paid better?
That all depends on your local market, ie job access
Practically hard to advise. But white collar is played for now.
It seems blue collar where is some demand but anything with prospects there would essentially require a switch and getting some sort of apprenticeship type set up which is also aint that easy but more viable than office
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I wish I knew. Ideally I planned to build a set of skills that can be applied to solving multiple very different problems.
It worked for a while. For a short time I had jobs whenre proving myself by doing was appreciated more than having formal credentials. But even then, my need for constant change was not understood. People even thought they were doing me a favor by giving me a long-term stable project as a reward.
Everything since has been hell.
In the corporate world the idea of transferable skills doesn't exist, actually it's actively looked down on. Unless you have the exact same job description in your previous job they won't even consider letting you do it, even though it's 80% the same.to build a set of skills that can be applied to solving multiple very different problems.
What was your set of skills?
Is there some kind of definitive list of useful transferable skills that these can be found on? I'm starting out and something like this would be very useful bc I have no idea