I no longer aspire to have a career.

  Рет қаралды 673,854

Katherout

Katherout

Күн бұрын

it's time to rethink this whole thing.
creators i mentioned:
Lynette Adkins: • i don't have a dream job
Sarah Hawkinson: • why you don't need a ~...
IamTionge: • I don't have a dream job
Nyla Rm: • I don't have a dream j...
Jonny Sun's 'Goodbye, Again': www.powells.com/book/goodbye-...
Industry on HBO: www.hbo.com/industry
the cottage fairy: / @thecottagefairy
Helen Anne Peterson: www.powells.com/book/cant-eve...
Yolo economy article: www.nytimes.com/2021/04/21/te...
⚡️instagram: / katherout
⚡️spotify: open.spotify.com/user/1225150...
⚡️twitter: / katherout​
⚡️ask me: kather0ut.tumblr.com/ask
TIME STAMPS//
0:00 - who the hell am i to make this video
1:18 - the pressure from childhood
2:23 - how college pushes us towards industry
3:53 - an unsure start in the working world
5:09 - work to live vs. live to work
5:51 - European labor culture vs. American labor culture
6:40 - the dangers of allying yourself to your career too strongly
8:30 - an unsettling example of toxic work glorification
11:36 - how you can pull yourself out
16:37 - media that helped me recreate my outlook
18:33 - boundaries are sexy
19:20 - thought experiment about people you admire
20:12 - the yolo economy
22:00 - the idea of a career was invented too
she/her.
BUSINESS INQUIRIES: katherout@gmail.com

Пікірлер: 7 700
@Katherout
@Katherout 3 жыл бұрын
HELLO & thanks for stopping by this here comment section! I felt compelled to clarify that not having a "career" is not the same as not having a job -- I completely understand that the vast majority of people do not have the freedom or ability to survive without work under capitalism. It is precisely *because* we have to spend so much time working that I advocate for a shift in the way we conceptualize of our identities, self-worth, validation away from labor.
@Furyswipes
@Furyswipes 3 жыл бұрын
"survive without work under capitalism" -- what system are you thinking of? There is no system that doesn't require work of someone (mostly everyone) for survival. So which one d'ya like? I really REALLY hope you say communism.
@icedthai
@icedthai 3 жыл бұрын
Post modernist philosophy, by which so many Millennials adhere to, is incapable of independent thinking. But when you get older you start to really, REALLY not care what others think. You're having an awakening.
@oceanwonders
@oceanwonders 3 жыл бұрын
That was a great video. Very well articulated.
@garywheeler9465
@garywheeler9465 3 жыл бұрын
See @Naval = 1) A fit body 2) a calm mind and 3) a house full of love. Those must be earned and cannot be bought.
@OjoRojo40
@OjoRojo40 3 жыл бұрын
There is this great book on the topic from a German author called The Capital . It even has a chapter where he talks about the feeling you have, it's called alienation :p Jokes aside, great video. Thanks for the content. Cheers!
@EmmaWisemanOfficial
@EmmaWisemanOfficial 3 жыл бұрын
I just want to be finanically stable while still having a life.
@user-dx5bn4yk4f
@user-dx5bn4yk4f 3 жыл бұрын
Same!
@peachyhello
@peachyhello 3 жыл бұрын
Yess
@gasto64
@gasto64 3 жыл бұрын
We are all slaves, and we will continue to do so to the end of the days, the only thing we can do is choose where to be slaves.
@sleeping_beauty322
@sleeping_beauty322 3 жыл бұрын
And for that you have billions of thirldworlders working themselves to death for for some firstworlders to ve "freed" from moving paper 8 hours 5 days in week
@kingkazuma2239
@kingkazuma2239 3 жыл бұрын
Have a job that's stable and gives you time off and some Healthcare benefits while having side hobbies
@safety_sid
@safety_sid 3 жыл бұрын
My dad always told me, "...a job is just for making a living. Your family and community will be your reason for living."
@rosamoreno4794
@rosamoreno4794 3 жыл бұрын
I wish someone would have told me this in my teens. Sigh..... 😞
@JourneyEntries
@JourneyEntries 3 жыл бұрын
I feel this way so hard, but I feel so scared to live like this haha
@Mia15239
@Mia15239 3 жыл бұрын
@@JourneyEntries truth. it may b worth it in the long run tho. just small small steps
@felixscholl2468
@felixscholl2468 3 жыл бұрын
true words!!! 😲
@AC-ri2ph
@AC-ri2ph 3 жыл бұрын
it’s hard to feel that way when your job is 80% of the time you spend a week
@1myedwards
@1myedwards 3 жыл бұрын
"A salary is the drug they give you to forget your dreams." -Kevin O'Leary
@Lebronwski
@Lebronwski 2 жыл бұрын
Give Kevin some context lol
@ajaykiller1992
@ajaykiller1992 Жыл бұрын
Also Kevin O'Leary 😒: "Quiet quitting is bad for you. If you quiet quit, you are a loser"
@johncooksey79
@johncooksey79 Жыл бұрын
@@ajaykiller1992 unless you "quiet quit" being a well paid spolesman for FTX
@audstrangeworld
@audstrangeworld Ай бұрын
Classism much? Lol
@Oachkatzl23
@Oachkatzl23 3 жыл бұрын
I lost my job because of illness. This is when I realized how dangerous it is if we base all our self-worth on our productivity. We are worthy as human beings as we are, our worth is not based on our productivity. I had to learn that the hard way.
@brielleanyez7113
@brielleanyez7113 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for your comment. I have been utterly depressed after losing my career due to my Multiple Sclerosis taking a turn for the worse. Im devastated. I hope you are ok dear, I'm trying to find my worth without work.
@rahbeeuh
@rahbeeuh 3 жыл бұрын
I lost mine as a result of disability but that's tough to prove. In retrospect, I spent most of my life working but I learned that life isn't all about "the grind" it never really got me anywhere
@acctsys
@acctsys 3 жыл бұрын
Productivity should be a measure that you buy in yourself. Enjoy the freedom of choice.
@dakotamabry1645
@dakotamabry1645 3 жыл бұрын
I can't afford to lose my job and keep alot of things to myself , I'm sure my job would get rid of me if I was ever pregnant. It's almost cruel that your no longer worth keeping around if you have any disability, my husband was denied jobs for his as well
@kitty79532
@kitty79532 3 жыл бұрын
My father worked hard from 16 till his early 30's fell off a roof at work into tar and burned most his lower body . He's had cancer twice , and a whole bunch of other health problems because of that accident. He hasn't been able to work since and all the money he had saved up to buy a house for my mother and the kids was put towards treating his health. People put in all they have at jobs that will replace them in a blink of an eye and not even care about what happens to you.
@TheNeonRabbit
@TheNeonRabbit 3 жыл бұрын
I spent decades doing a job I absolutely hated because it "paid well". Don't do that, just don't. Now I'm old and sick, my wife's passed away and I spend a lot of time just thinking about the beautiful creative things I was capable of, the things I could have done, my talents and aptitudes. I thought I was successful. I was wrong. I'm not saying this to be pitied. I'm saying it to serve as a warning beacon. I'm saying it to act as an existential lighthouse. This shore is littered with shipwrecks. Steer clear. Find other ways.
@hannw7
@hannw7 3 жыл бұрын
THIS.
@kateaye3506
@kateaye3506 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you, NeonRabbit. I needed to hear this. Desperately.
@chizaa8
@chizaa8 3 жыл бұрын
This made me tear up a bit 🥺
@hrobertson439
@hrobertson439 3 жыл бұрын
Wow, beacon received. You've helped me make a decision I've been desperately struggling with and I can't even begin to thank you. Time to plot another course. Again, thank you
@akiraasmr3002
@akiraasmr3002 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this I worked a job that payed well too but I was so depressed and my creativity died so I kind of died and started abusing drugs I was really going to kill myself since I already felt dead but then I finally got fired from that place and it was a blessing because now I do what I am passionate about and am not dreading my life anymore. I told myself if I go back to working those kind of jobs I would def off myself because if my creativity dies I die. Hearing your story gives me more inspiration to keep pushing.
@julhippo
@julhippo 3 жыл бұрын
remember folks.... a company will replace you in a few weeks if something happens to you, your family and friends will never be able to
@charlotteliu9786
@charlotteliu9786 3 жыл бұрын
Very true even if u dedicate all your time and hard effort to your work, you (the worker) will be replaceable by someone else in no time. Spending time with your family and friends is quality time. But sometimes it is so hard to plan and make time for your loved ones, since your time is being dedicated to your work and studying in order to have your job/dreamjob.
@hope-cat4894
@hope-cat4894 3 жыл бұрын
That's why you don't put your life at risk for your job if you don't have to. They'll just send your family a plant with a card to your funeral and keep on moving.
@magdalenast.7936
@magdalenast.7936 3 жыл бұрын
Wise words. Which is why I want to own my own business in the future even if it is part-time.
@maleehakabeer1392
@maleehakabeer1392 3 жыл бұрын
Of course they do...it's a business. What do you want them to do?
@mero2627
@mero2627 3 жыл бұрын
Unless you don’t have family or friends
@helectra
@helectra 2 жыл бұрын
when i was little people asked me "what i wanted to be when i grew up". i literally thought it was absurd that anyone would think i could actually dream of working
@belen_hummus
@belen_hummus 3 жыл бұрын
"It actually concerns me to do one thing for 40 years". Perfectly said.
@Lebronwski
@Lebronwski 2 жыл бұрын
How lol?
@belen_hummus
@belen_hummus 2 жыл бұрын
@@Lebronwski One of the points of the video is that many of us grow and thrive when we experience variety and have flexibility when it comes to our career. Some people enjoy doing exactly the same thing all their lives but that's not the most common and for most people it's not healthy or desirable.
@dianewebb1855
@dianewebb1855 2 жыл бұрын
omg yes! I "fell" into my career after getting divorced and becoming a single mom. I needed a job to pay my bills and raise my family. Sadly it has never fulfilled me. I've stayed in field for 20 years now, but have changed jobs and moved a few times. I've been at my current job for 7 years now and I look around wondering how anyone loves being in the same spot so long. I sure don't but I need to pay my bills and have healthcare. We aren't simply here to just work and die.
@mfrancisco_850
@mfrancisco_850 Жыл бұрын
@@dianewebb1855 agree with you totally the system that has been set up is broken. I think younger people are just becoming more aware about it at a younger age now and its happening faster now.
@jd8184
@jd8184 Жыл бұрын
@@Lebronwski variety is the spice of life
@siennamagdaleno146
@siennamagdaleno146 3 жыл бұрын
I want my life’s work to look like this - growing a garden - writing stories - painting - learning ceramics - learning how to cook & bake better - volunteering to help different causes - spending most of my time with family and friends
@pearlsphindlemchunu2643
@pearlsphindlemchunu2643 3 жыл бұрын
Exactly bestie !♥️
@Rich.Newell
@Rich.Newell 3 жыл бұрын
Are you in the U.S? Will you have healthcare insurance? How will you pay rent? Can you hand on heart say that your dream lifestyle will not involve taking a single cent or asset from someone that worked hard to get it?
@shellyg824
@shellyg824 3 жыл бұрын
@Rich New those are the things that keep me up at night. I don't need a dream job, but I need money to pay for rent, food, all the different types of insurances, plus other things... I want to garden and fill my life with things I love. But those things costs money, and living and breathing costs money. I feel stuck
@nso5625
@nso5625 3 жыл бұрын
this is my ideal life, too.
@savleelxine
@savleelxine 3 жыл бұрын
@@Rich.Newell she said WANT. If society didn’t uphold government and currency and there was no reason to labor yourself to death, this is what she would WANT.
@meronaydiko4575
@meronaydiko4575 3 жыл бұрын
I often feel inadequate for being so "unambitious" when it comes to careers, but I have to remind myself that you can be ambitious in your relationships, your non-monetized skills, your whatever!!
@beccamatilda8621
@beccamatilda8621 3 жыл бұрын
Still learning to remember and accept this as well, I appreciate the reminder and that I'm not alone in feeling this way. ☺️
@lotuswolf1518
@lotuswolf1518 3 жыл бұрын
Yes also by the current scenario life is unfair and unjust and unemployment is a major problem , most people don't like their jobs, terrible bosses, no passion, low salaries, nasty coworkers , nothing is worth it
@xdshepard37
@xdshepard37 3 жыл бұрын
“The simple things are also the most extraordinary things, and only the wise can see them.” ― Paulo Coelho, The Alchemist
@Chachixo
@Chachixo 3 жыл бұрын
!!! and as long as you're happy and you're not hurting anyone, who cares? That's the way it should be.
@lotuswolf1518
@lotuswolf1518 3 жыл бұрын
@@Chachixo some people are always bitter about it and get offended, fuck them, we shouldn't care , if she has money she is retiring then
@JonathanTash
@JonathanTash 3 жыл бұрын
I admire people who: 1. Do things because they want to, and for no other reason 2. Love to see other people doing well
@annab.5052
@annab.5052 3 жыл бұрын
Not everyone has “good” choices/options when it comes to work. Nor can anyone expect to live a carefree, child-like life of “I’ll just do what I want” for the rest of our lives. At some point, we are pushed out of the nest and must fend for ourselves. I admire people who do what they need to do to can take care of their family (or themselves) without becoming a burden on others, still keep their optimism and creative spark alive, and don’t complain about living the consequences of the decisions they have made. I could have done better in this regard myself, but that was my bad, not my employer’s. The fact is, it is just easier to follow the crowd than to follow your heart - especially when you are young because you simply do not know better. It is the challenges in life that allow you the opportunity to “know better”. Learn, adjust, and try again.
@JonathanTash
@JonathanTash 3 жыл бұрын
​@@annab.5052 I make my own options. I know life is hard, and it pushes us around, but people are capable of far more than they think. I wasted years of my life seeking approval from authority, only to be cursed and beaten down. This is why I do what I want, and I don't care what other people have to say- unless of course, they are indicating that I am harming them in some way.
@RealnameKevin
@RealnameKevin 3 жыл бұрын
I actually admire people more who do things they don’t want to but may need to . Life isn’t always about selfish wants. Balance requires you to not always put yourself first.
@JonathanTash
@JonathanTash 3 жыл бұрын
@@RealnameKevin Anyone who thinks they do things for other people fist are lying to themselves. Just admit and accept that you care about yourself first, then you will have a lot more time and energy to give to others.
@nikolavanzettiteslasacco4991
@nikolavanzettiteslasacco4991 2 жыл бұрын
Yes! I agree 1000%.
@NostalgiaMan
@NostalgiaMan 3 жыл бұрын
A career is not who a person is and I think people are just getting sick of working so hard for little to no gain sometimes. It gets frustrating and all I want to do is enjoy my life for a change.
@agentofchaos2901
@agentofchaos2901 2 жыл бұрын
What ARE your videos
@roamingmompreneur792
@roamingmompreneur792 3 жыл бұрын
A lot of the hustling has more to do with impressing strangers than with personal growth.
@anveshapandey952
@anveshapandey952 3 жыл бұрын
Some1 finally said it!
@LiwaySaGu
@LiwaySaGu 3 жыл бұрын
nailed it!
@amilliev.6131
@amilliev.6131 3 жыл бұрын
exactly!
@DrWhom
@DrWhom 3 жыл бұрын
I think that we are wired for living in a group of between 10 and 300 people. In such groups, every passing interaction matters because you _will_ be dealing with that individual again, maybe tomorrow, maybe next year. Now put our brains in an environment where there are 8 billion people to interact with and you get... well, me talking to you right now!
@mikaela9799
@mikaela9799 3 жыл бұрын
@@DrWhom hello! :)¨you're right
@dande3139
@dande3139 3 жыл бұрын
"What do you want to be when you grow up?" "An honest, brave, compassionate human being." "No... I mean, how do you want to sell your labor?"
@freubies5563
@freubies5563 3 жыл бұрын
💯🤮
@coyoter9691
@coyoter9691 3 жыл бұрын
It really is disturbing how they primed our brains from such a young age to associate "what we want to BE" with a job/career. Super, super young children, almost as soon as they learn to talk and engage with the world, are being primed to associate their future identity with a job choice. It's scary how commonly that question was asked to me as a child, to all of us. Your identity is not the same thing as earning money - those are entirely different things. One is who you are, the other is just something you do to make money, completely unrelated. Sometimes they overlap for people, but it shouldn't be the default or the expectation. I remember being very stressed when I was high school aged, and when I was trying out community college. There was so much pressure to choose a path that would fulfill me, what was I interested in. At 18 years old they expected me to know. Thankfully I left college before accepting any loans, because I realized I had no idea what I was getting into. I've separated earning money from my passions, and now everything is a lot more clear for me and I'm planning out my life in a way that makes sense to me.
@ssnowypug
@ssnowypug 3 жыл бұрын
:(
@lottalehtonen4650
@lottalehtonen4650 3 жыл бұрын
@@coyoter9691 It is crazy that everybody should know what they want to do as their job at the age of 18 and build the identity of themselves around that... People change as they age and what one wants at 18 might not be what they want when they are 38 😅 If we and our identities are aqual to our work wouldn't we be considered dead when we retire? 😂 Sadly though sometimes it seems to be so...
@Furyswipes
@Furyswipes 3 жыл бұрын
There are alternatives to selling your labor--they involve exceptional talent. Got any? Or do you just want other people who ARE selling their labor to pay your way?
@zachcurtis1283
@zachcurtis1283 3 жыл бұрын
"Work is what you can get paid to do because nobody wants to do it." Alan Watts I'm 30 years old with a well paying, established job in manufacturing, and while many people think my job is so great and this is where I should want to be, I've learned that the perspective, especially in America, of the "value of hard work" is horribly misguided. Notice, the people who tell you to work hard and hard work is good for you and that should be your goal, they either have other people doing the hard work for them, or they've worked their life away, and look how broken down they are. Don't work your life away.
@jesustyronechrist2330
@jesustyronechrist2330 3 жыл бұрын
"Hard work" is brute-forcing it. Most successful people like Elon Musk wouldn't say "Work hard", but "Make a lot of mistakes". When he slept in his Tesla factory's office during production, it wasn't because he was "working hard", it was because his guidance and supervision was needed almost 24/7. Sure, he "worked hard", but what he actually did was have no trust in hiring people who could share this supervision burden. So in a sense, "working hard" is just "working stupid", when you could make this work a lot easier and efficient with a little bit of "hard work".
@alchemist889
@alchemist889 3 жыл бұрын
"You'll be doing something you hate in order to keep doing something you hate, and that's stupid."
@axeslinger94
@axeslinger94 2 жыл бұрын
This mentality is a direct, historical result of the people here refusing to teach, honor, and acknowledge the complex history of american chattle slavery. What naysayers also fail to realize is not wanting to work doesn't just come from a place of privilege. Their viewpoint is steeped in capitalist realism, lack of nuance, and plain misinformation. There's no need for us to work as hard as we do when we have everything we could ever need and then some at our fingertips in this country. Other countries do not have this same luxury as a result of another vast web of forces hellbent on keeping them in abject poverty, but they also deserve to work much less than they do as well. This stance isn't just for decently well-off white people who don't wanna work and I wish more people could be upfront about that.
@rainbrownie9056
@rainbrownie9056 2 жыл бұрын
I can’t imagine a job actually paying me well that’s a dream for me lol 😂
@CS..8
@CS..8 3 жыл бұрын
YES!!!!!! WHY aren’t we allowed to “job hop” to EXPLORE and LEARN and be a WELL-ROUNDED, OPEN-MINDED PERSON?!?!?!?! I never got that!!!!!!! If you want to only do one thing then HECK YES!!!!!!!! GO YOU!!!!!! But why is EVERYONE EXPECTED to do this instead of truly enjoying the world and life they live?!
@nondescriptbeing5944
@nondescriptbeing5944 3 жыл бұрын
It's because the thing that costs companies a boatload is training new employees, so they peddle these ideas.
@DarknessIsThePath
@DarknessIsThePath 3 жыл бұрын
You live in a society.
@rcor0net304
@rcor0net304 3 жыл бұрын
"allowed"
@blackmanops3749
@blackmanops3749 3 жыл бұрын
Well, the down side of doing this is that you'll always be at entry level. You will not achieve the expert level reward of honing your skill. That's the downside of being a generalist. The downside of being an expert is having limited choice of employers and/or being highly susceptible to industry ups and downs.
@jordanb7304
@jordanb7304 3 жыл бұрын
I don't think you're not allowed to. But for the businesses hiring you probably look unreliable? Most businesses don't want to invest into an employee that will leave and they will have to replace later. I think that's as simple as it gets
@anateresalopes7746
@anateresalopes7746 3 жыл бұрын
I will just leave this here: "a man has two lifes. The second one begins when he realizes he has just one."
@tifking73
@tifking73 3 жыл бұрын
🥇
@fiveplustwo10
@fiveplustwo10 3 жыл бұрын
gonna get a tat of this!!
@Myrslokstok
@Myrslokstok 3 жыл бұрын
Good one!
@lovely7464
@lovely7464 3 жыл бұрын
This is good
@spacedoohicky
@spacedoohicky 3 жыл бұрын
Is that an actual quote from someone?
@aliceinwonderland42020
@aliceinwonderland42020 3 жыл бұрын
The idea of a 40 year career made me so depressed after I finished school, only when I realized I can do whatever I want I don’t have to conform to a system I felt free.
@e11eme
@e11eme 3 жыл бұрын
how? how do you make money? If i dont have my job i cant pay my bills, but im too tired to do anything after work
@kitty79532
@kitty79532 3 жыл бұрын
@@e11eme the op doesnt mean he doednt have to work he saying it was crazy to think he has to do one single career and just work tirelessly for 40 years but he doesnt . He can quiet whebever he would like and do different job and try new things . You get out of life what you put into it . Be a slave to a system and stay in your comfort zone or dare to make bold choices and deal with them .
@aliceinwonderland42020
@aliceinwonderland42020 3 жыл бұрын
@@e11eme I do work! I‘m a self employed illustrator I always knew art is my true passion in life and finally pursued it. I love being self employed because the thought of working for someone else annoys me deeply since my career is my passion. I also now realized (I‘m 22) that I don’t have to be stuck in something I can always change, life in general always changes. I should’ve worded it better tbh, I felt like I had to do something I didn’t like and felt forced to do it just like school felt to me. That this was just how it is and that it just gets worse. That freedom you get when you turn into an adult can be overwhelming until you realize it’s all you ever wanted. Many people go with the mindset that life has to be miserable most times aka hating mondays cause of work they hate. I love every aspect of my life, finally a Monday doesn’t suck anymore.
@aliceinwonderland42020
@aliceinwonderland42020 3 жыл бұрын
@@e11eme maybe I can try giving you some advice. First you need to think about what you truly want in life what is your passion? And don’t overthink that it can be the most simple thing and its usually your passion since childhood. I always got the impression from my environment that art is a career for people who don’t wanna earn money that I should get a „real“ career. But that is total bs. You can make money from basically anything doesn’t matter what. Look at marie kondo for example, that woman just loved organization and made a whole career out of it. Don’t let other people limit your thinking of what you can achieve in life. If you have your passion you need to make a plan how to get there aka make money from it and here is yt and google your best friend I learned everything to be a self employed illustrator on here. And of course I had my years of working in retail and marketing at a 9-5 this took time and effort to achieve but it is absolutely possible. And also a very important aspect, maybe your passion isn’t a career. For some people their family is their passion, having kids and caring for them. Or living self substantially or whatever. You won’t feel like you don’t have time anymore because work „steals“ it all. Hope I could help 🌸
@aliceinwonderland42020
@aliceinwonderland42020 3 жыл бұрын
@@kitty79532 exactly what I meant!
@angelamarie6490
@angelamarie6490 3 жыл бұрын
This resonates with me. I was told my whole life to get a job already. But I did it my way. I was able to get my Bachelor's degree, get married, have 3 kids, be a stay at home mom for 12 years, work part time while homeschooling, cloth diaper, have a garden, take my kids to all the cool places in NYC (where we live), and now I'm back in college pursuing something new. I'm happy.
@mochhhhee
@mochhhhee 3 жыл бұрын
Honestly that sounds lovely! I'm 22 and some of my peers from highschool are graduating this year, while I am starting (yet again, because of mental health reasons). We are told that if you don't have your life solved by your mid twenties you're doing something wrong (Forbes 30 under 30 thank you not), and capital gains are only acceptable measure for success. I'm glad you're doing what makes you happy! Testimonies like yours make me feel hopeful 💕
@Paul_Wetor
@Paul_Wetor 3 жыл бұрын
And the money to support your dream life came from...?
@angelamarie6490
@angelamarie6490 3 жыл бұрын
@@Paul_Wetor I am married 28 years to a man with a job and for the last 15 years I also have been working. We never had a lot of money. We sacrificed material things for awesome experiences with the kids and with each other. I'm still living my dream life. And you?
@Paul_Wetor
@Paul_Wetor 3 жыл бұрын
Never married, now retired. Solitude works for me, but I appreciate what parents do. (There is a park lagoon near me where kids are often looking for frogs with their parents. Some even have nets and boots. I mentally applaud them for participating in their child's interest.)
@coralovesnature
@coralovesnature 3 жыл бұрын
Whenever people say things implying that work is the only way to have a fulfilling life/ be productive, I always think, "What about stay at home parents?" I think it is wonderful to be a stay at home parent and that it is equally (or more!) important to any other job!
@Danielle-to9un
@Danielle-to9un 3 жыл бұрын
“Jobs aren’t designed for you to love them… the point is to give you income so you can participate in society”. Great point. It’s also when you act out of society’s “norms” that you’re ridiculed, because we’re all taught the same lie about productivity, getting a good job, etc., so it does the companies and the poor people who’ve followed them for years no benefit to break the mold. Misery loves company. And the companies need us to buy into it to keep the machine going. Thanks for posting.
@dianehong1217
@dianehong1217 3 жыл бұрын
I gave up on being an artist at the age of 18 because everyone told me that I would starve if I majored in art. So, I chose something more practical. I regretted that decision every day since. Luckily, at age 50, I have started to draw and paint again. It is like rediscovering the real person that I am. It’s never too late, folks.
@jmgmetal
@jmgmetal 3 жыл бұрын
I did the opposite and it’s a financial struggle. Grass isn’t always greener on the other side. You can have hobbies but still be practical at the same time. In school they told me I could be a doctor or lawyer if I wanted because of my grades..but I was rebellious and stubborn. Pursued art, and I’m doing ok, but nowhere near what I could be making if I applied myself in a more practical manner.
@AZ_TONY
@AZ_TONY 3 жыл бұрын
Idk why people give up their hobbies, plenty of hours in the week to accommodate almost anything if you delegate properly.....
@cerberusnovaempire9483
@cerberusnovaempire9483 3 жыл бұрын
Well all my family and friends didn't waste an opportunity to tell me my art was not gonna make me money to leave it and focus on back breaking work. Now im a tattoo artist and make money amd they bitch about how soft my hands are and how i dont have to wake up hella early like them so now im "lazy" .. lol so just do what u wanna do your worst enemy is not your family or people who tell u that you can't do something your wors enemy is yourself . If u doubt yourself u never gonna reach that dream. Keep on fighting dreamers of the world
@dramatriangle
@dramatriangle 3 жыл бұрын
@@cerberusnovaempire9483 that's very inspiring to me.
@Furyswipes
@Furyswipes 3 жыл бұрын
My daughter was an art major. She's an engineer now cause she liked to eat and live in a house. Don't be an art major, kids. That's a hobby, not a way to provide for yourself. No one can teach you art anyway. It comes from within.
@hape3862
@hape3862 3 жыл бұрын
The hamster wheel looks like a career ladder only from the inside.
@zsofiaszobonya8571
@zsofiaszobonya8571 3 жыл бұрын
I'm going to print this out and put it on my wall cause gods, I need this! Also, I wish I could show this to my workaholic parents, but they'd downright reject it.
@acraze2287
@acraze2287 3 жыл бұрын
wow I've never heard of this analogy. definitely need to remember this one
@babykosh5415
@babykosh5415 3 жыл бұрын
This is brilliant, seriously.
@Followmybliss777
@Followmybliss777 3 жыл бұрын
@@zsofiaszobonya8571 it’s not black and white, people do have careers they enjoy and a good life work balance - it can be done ✅
@EverlastGX
@EverlastGX 3 жыл бұрын
I like this
@sixelaafiercee
@sixelaafiercee 2 жыл бұрын
this whole video lit me the fuck up. I feel so seen, so heard, and excited to start to dream in a way that will produce a life that is well-lived versus well worked.
@Yourrrr
@Yourrrr 2 жыл бұрын
Wowwww reading this comment made me light up too just from the power behind the words in it!! I hope you’ve been dreaming up a life well-lived in the past 5 months 💕
@sixelaafiercee
@sixelaafiercee 2 жыл бұрын
@@Yourrrr thank you ☺️ I definitely have switched gears to live more than I work. It’s been lovely.
@spencerjames9417
@spencerjames9417 3 жыл бұрын
The problem is the people that genuinely believe they're making a societal contribution by slaving away for a fortune 500 company for the entirety of their lives
@spencerjames9417
@spencerjames9417 3 жыл бұрын
Remember hearing that mantra as a kid, "Get a job so you can be a contributing member to society"
@annab.5052
@annab.5052 3 жыл бұрын
What is so bad about contributing to society by supporting yourself, providing for your family, or simply having a reason to get out of bed each morning? What is the alternative - living without a purpose? I am sure your parents often wondered, “should I feed, clothe, and shelter Jack today?” Was their answer wrong? Did they ever know how grateful you were that they put your needs ahead of theirs when the alternative was quit their job(s) to “follow their dream”? Speaking for myself, I was glad that there was an adult in the room when I was growing up. Once my other seven siblings and I were out of the house, my parents did as they pleased, so they did not spend their entire lives working to support us.
@coralovesnature
@coralovesnature 3 жыл бұрын
@@annab.5052 Personally, I think there are many ways one can be a contributing member of society. Working a corporate job is just the most common one. For example, you could volunteer doing charitable things, be a stay at home parent, or even just work a more "irregular" or "untraditional" job. I currently work as a tax accountant and am the primary provider of my family. My husband works only 1 day a week and will be a stay at home dad when we have kids. I don't mind working because we need to have money to live, but I think some people aren't cut out for the corporate life. I also think other ways of contributing, especially being a stay at home parent, are invaluable to society and equally, if not more important, than working just to earn money. Not working does not equate to "without purpose" and following your dreams doesn't mean you have to quit working. Also, wanting something a little different for oneself does not equate to being ungrateful. I am very grateful and priveleged to have had 2 parents who provided for us and were present in our lives. However, they both had meaningless careers that they could take or leave and now that all of us kids are grown up and out of the house, they have few hobbies, little mutual purpose, and hate each other. Is having meaningless jobs the sole cause of this? No, but it's also not some magical glue that makes everything great and dandy. Either way, I don't want to end up like how my parents are now.
@coralovesnature
@coralovesnature 3 жыл бұрын
@Soham Mehta Yes, I'm not denying that. Even my current job as a tax accountant I find meaning in because I get to work directly with a lot of small, local business owners and I love that. But you can find meaning apart from work also. That's wonderful that you are called to be an astrophysicist, but from the very limited context I have, it just sounds like you are trying to control your wife and have her do what's best for you, not what's best for her. It's one thing to push someone/ encourage them in something they show interest in (if that's the case here, then great, you can disregard my other comments), but to force someone to do something they don't desire for themselves is just being manipulative. If my husband wanted to work or had a calling, I would encourage him to pursue it, but he hates school and no true career is of particular interest to him. On the other hand, he has shown great interest in being a father and prefers spending most of his time at home, so being a stay-at-home dad is a perfect fit for him.
@nicolasm400
@nicolasm400 2 жыл бұрын
@@annab.5052 because 5 out of 8 hours you work you don't actually contribute to yourself or society you live in but you contribute for your Employer who see you as a tool to be replaced as soon as it breaks
@GreenEnvy.
@GreenEnvy. 3 жыл бұрын
Growing up, my parents were strangers who came home 2 hours before my bedtime. This is what living to work does.
@seaportsthename
@seaportsthename 3 жыл бұрын
my mom was a stay at home mom, my stepdad worked oilfield. he’s a good man, worked hard to support kids that weren’t his as well as his own. but that meant i grew up never really knowing the man that provided for me. it was like money just kind of appeared. we never needed anything. but we also would go weeks without seeing him. i’m 28 now and we pretty much dont have much of a relationship because of this. he also had some kind of epiphany and suddenly quit the oilfield and does random projects for fun in their garage. everyone thought he’d lost his mind. in my opinion he finally found it.
@KaitlinGaspar
@KaitlinGaspar 3 жыл бұрын
@@seaportsthename i love that ending so much he is a success story :)
@ReallyMartha
@ReallyMartha 3 жыл бұрын
@@seaportsthename I've got a somewhat similar story, but both parents worked. My relationship with my parents and siblings now is completely different from when I was a kid. I couldn't be more thankful for what we have now. Unfortunately, I now live 500+ miles away and across the US/Canada border, but I wonder if that plays a part in how much I miss them. I'm 31 btw. I think you could slowly start building a relationship with him! It's not too late. :)
@Jennifer12342
@Jennifer12342 3 жыл бұрын
Or maybe they wanted to provide a house for you to sleep in. You should thank their selfless efforts instead of being bratty.
@AntonioSerranoMx91
@AntonioSerranoMx91 3 жыл бұрын
@@Jennifer12342 indeed.
@mood1694
@mood1694 3 жыл бұрын
'' Jobs aren't designed for you to love them '', that, hit me real hard. I've never looked at it that way before. I've always said to myself that I wanted a job which I love, that would make me happy. But I've come to the realization that I just want a job that doesn't make me almost cry, get mad, or be depressed when I wake up in the morning. I already get those feelings when I have to go to school, and I'm sick of them.
@gmma125_5
@gmma125_5 3 жыл бұрын
28 years old. It won't change unless you do something significant now. Wishing you the very, very best. Chase your dreams, please do. If you fail it's not a problem you'll love you had the balls to try. That may be the only consolation though, life is suffering. and more so when you think the way you've demonstrated (I do too, not attacking you). To simplify it all, assess your expectations and map out what would give you the most peace. If you do this honestly you'll realise that there are certain things you'll have to sacrifice or at least run the very real risk of not having (high status, marriage, kids, career) but ultimately you may (and only may) reach that point of peace and happiness, a worthy risk I'd say. Therapist and a little prayer won't hurt either ;). Lots of love - good luck
@zinab2blessa
@zinab2blessa 3 жыл бұрын
If the job has a meaning to you and gives you a sense of purpose, then you will end up loving it. ALL places of work have their challenges but some are tolerable and as an adult you will have the ability to navigate through them and decide when it's time to move on from that job that is bringing you misery!! As humans we can be weak at times and it is OK, that is the reality. Accept it and give your body the right to feel whatever you are feeling at that moment and make prayers so that He might give you strength to go through this. Try and minimize your consumption of social media, don't compare your life to others and definitely find something you enjoy outside of school(knitting, drawing, food making, self development courses, skating, exercise, writing.. etc.) This way you will map out your interests and discover your stronger sides. Volunteering also helps a lot to frame you view of the world and it might make things clearer.
@zinab2blessa
@zinab2blessa 3 жыл бұрын
@@gmma125_5 Beautiful comment. In my religion there is the concept of making the effort and leaving to rest to GOD. If things are meant for you, no one will take them away from you. So when you fail, it means this was not meant for you to have at this moment in life(you might get them a later point) and maybe there is a lesson to be learned here for the future. You give your self time and then you try again. I hope the OP reads your comment
@mood1694
@mood1694 3 жыл бұрын
@gmma125_ @zinab2blessa Thank you very much for taking some time out of your day to write those comments!♥ I REALLY appreciate them and will definitely take them into consideration/ apply them. I've already started, as you guys said, to map out what I enjoy doing the most, and got some ideas for the future. Especially because I've only got a couple of months left before graduating (PS: I didn't rush the ideas, it took me some time before I finally found out what I really liked). Now, if things don't work out, I won't beat myself over them, as you guys said, maybe it wasn't meant for me and at least, I had the balls to pursue what was, at the time, important for me. Of course, I know that not all things in life will be great, there will be some challenges however I'm still going to try my best and pursue what I love doing and if it wasn't meant to be, then it wasn't. Again, thank you very much, I wish you a beautiful day/evening! ♥
@jjhoran6238
@jjhoran6238 3 жыл бұрын
Move off grid and become self reliant. Then you'll never need to worry about a career, job, money, bills, taxes etc. Then you have all the time in the world to enjoy life and not be a slave to the corrupted system.
@humanclub2183
@humanclub2183 3 жыл бұрын
I want my life work to be: -constantly learning about the beautiful world and universe around me -practicing spirituality -healing myself and helping others to heal as well -doing art for the sake of art -playing my intruments whenever i want to listen to music -writing whenever i want to read something -growing my own food and cooking it whenever i am hungry -going outside when i feel like it
@prarthnap7105
@prarthnap7105 2 жыл бұрын
Sameee
@justcallmeteacup4711
@justcallmeteacup4711 3 жыл бұрын
It's incredible how many angry, defensive comments are under the lists people made when answering what they'd like to do if they didn't need to work. Please, ask yourself why seeing hobbies and gentle desires makes you so hostile.
@aprilaries164
@aprilaries164 3 жыл бұрын
Please say that again.
@fbaallied
@fbaallied 3 жыл бұрын
Because it's a first world problem.
@suqadiqniwa
@suqadiqniwa 3 жыл бұрын
@@fbaallied personally, I'm not from a first world country, but I don't want to spend my whole life slaving away to a company for pennies, they'll never share profit with us workers, so yuh. Fuck capitalism, finally we opened our eyes to the misery they pay us for our specialized labour.
@fbaallied
@fbaallied 3 жыл бұрын
@@suqadiqniwa Correct, but I was just explaining why ppl are mad in the comments.
@Chironex_Fleckeri
@Chironex_Fleckeri 3 жыл бұрын
@@suqadiqniwa Capitalism isn't the problem. Unfettered capitalism and Corporate Personhood are. There must be balance.
@empoweredesquire
@empoweredesquire 3 жыл бұрын
I almost quit being an attorney despite it being the career I always wanted. Once I left the office I was working in and starting working for myself, I fell in love with it again. Sometimes it’s the toxic environments that we work that makes us hate our work.
@marilynmonheaux6356
@marilynmonheaux6356 3 жыл бұрын
The good thing is you’re licensed to practice law and you can work for yourself on your own terms.
@samanthab6642
@samanthab6642 3 жыл бұрын
THIS THIS THIS THIS!!! People really need to understand this before them completely give up on their dreams. I am in my 30s pursuing a new career and my goal is to get my independent license eventually so I can work for myself.
@Rosieq1197
@Rosieq1197 3 жыл бұрын
Yes mam!
@xlx077
@xlx077 3 жыл бұрын
Thiis!!!!
@edwinvargas7969
@edwinvargas7969 3 жыл бұрын
I’d argue the toxic environments are exactly because of the system which increasingly asks more of us, and makes us more competitive through scarcity, which forces people to become toxic to come out on top. It always starts from the root.
@Smalls-eye24
@Smalls-eye24 3 жыл бұрын
Y’all ever notice that it’s impossible to hang out with anyone outside of work bc our schedules are always so different therefore ensuring isolation even more
@Tiarose88
@Tiarose88 3 жыл бұрын
Adulting ruins everything
@aegisreflector1239
@aegisreflector1239 3 жыл бұрын
We have to find a way to change the system and rebel
@sarahlyd4015
@sarahlyd4015 3 жыл бұрын
YES
@tiffytiffamanda1217
@tiffytiffamanda1217 3 жыл бұрын
yes!! omg, it actually makes me sad!
@AmberNicoleOfficial
@AmberNicoleOfficial 3 жыл бұрын
Literally 🤦🏽‍♀️ I hang out with my best friend of 15 years probably 4 times a year no lie
@scoutlaceharding
@scoutlaceharding 3 жыл бұрын
I have mental illnesses and, in my case, they have been disabling. I dropped out of high school my senior year and for the longest time my obsession was getting back "on track." Get my GED, get into a four year university, figure out what my (marketable) passion was, and have a career. This is how I thought my life would go for as long as I could remember and I was desperate to make it happen because I had so much of my self-worth tied up in it. I forced myself through two semesters of college and had an absolute breakdown. I forced myself to get a part time job...and had an absolute breakdown. I was devastated. For now, at least, neither school nor working a traditional job are options for me but I am unbelievably lucky in that I have parents that support me. I recently turned 30 and that looming birthday brought all my lingering feelings of failure and self-doubt to the surface. But your video makes me wonder. What if I wasn't ill? What if I had followed "the plan"? Gotten a degree and a career? I was so focused on achieving these goals I never stopped to think about if they would make me happy. I honestly doubt it. It's entirely possible that, even if I didn't have the mental illnesses I do now. that forcing myself down that track would have caused a whole different host of mental health problems. Thanks for the video. It's given me lots to think about.
@amaraj98
@amaraj98 3 жыл бұрын
This video was so validating! I’m currently 22 and it feels like my peers have it all figured out. But, I’m realizing it’s not that I don’t have it “figured out”, I just don’t have any desire to devote all of those years of my life to a company that doesn’t care about me. Thank you for this
@marby.
@marby. 3 жыл бұрын
No one ever has it figured out, even the elderly. You're in a race by yourself. Don't focus on what others are doing, strive to be the best version of you. ✌🏾❤
@khodges72
@khodges72 3 жыл бұрын
At 22 I was a software engineer. From the outside, it might have looked like I had it "figured out", but really I was depressed and confused. I think that most people haven't figured out a damn thing.
@nerdmaid1240
@nerdmaid1240 2 жыл бұрын
This is such a common feeling in your 20s, but honestly, for most people their 20s is the time they feel least in control. I think you come out of your teens and feel like you need to demonstrate that you're no longer a kid and that you can function as an adult, but I remember asking my mum in my late teens when I would feel like an adult. She replied, 'I still don't'. We're all just play acting. I'm 47 and I still don't have it figured out. Always learning and enjoying the process. 💕
@parisa9resident456
@parisa9resident456 3 жыл бұрын
I went through these thoughts and quit a corporate job when I was 38...I went from six figures to zero. I tried and had limited success creating income streams for myself while trying to find more balance in my life. At 43, I was 80,000 in debt and miserable. I returned to corporate America that year and made a vow to be thankful for the income and also know that it's just a job. I take all vacation...I don't strive for promotions and I work understanding that "they" don't give two craps about me. I do not spend hours ruminating on my work, I just do it and shut it down at the end of the day. Now, at 50, I'm out of debt and more realistic about how I approach work. It my case it was more about balance. I hated being broke and I don't want to live in a van, although I love that people are doing that. Good luck to you whichever way you go.
@katelynbrown98
@katelynbrown98 3 жыл бұрын
As someone who's about to be 28, thank you for this!!! Financial stability is a real concern
@mrsclayton1819
@mrsclayton1819 3 жыл бұрын
I appreciate you sharing your experience! I think we are in similar situations. I don't want to completely quit working, I just don't want my job to dominate me. This is not a popular attitude and I feel alone at times, surrounded by many ambitious crabs in a pot.
@Greetingsearthling22
@Greetingsearthling22 3 жыл бұрын
I think this is what I need to do. I’m late to life due to my circumstances and I’ve finally got a career but I need to work on allowing it to not dominate me. I feel like everything hangs on this job and I want everyone to like me and look at me as an asset. I stayed home today because I got a bad stomach that kept me up all night. I had to tell myself that I should stay home and get better and that my health is the most important, but moments come when I feel like I’m a disappointed which requires me to remind myself that I’m more important and to be okay if they stop liking me.
@williamlehan4079
@williamlehan4079 3 жыл бұрын
It’s important to know your baseline standard of living and what you need to do to maintain that and no more. Yours may be higher than some peoples’, and that’s fine. Good for you that you figured out that balance.
@taejun9017
@taejun9017 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for actually putting monetary figures in your story, they are always left out of conversations like this, as if it's not a problem, and leaving your job to frolic about the world is just a matter of balls.
@austinmoon
@austinmoon 3 жыл бұрын
I first thought of my aunt. She has a very modest life (some would say lower-middle class). I honestly don’t even know what she does for a job nowadays. I admire her because when we go on hikes together she makes me laugh and think new thoughts. I admire her because she’s very spontaneous and loves adventure. I admire her because her house is filled to the brim with plants and it looks like a jungle. I admire her not because of her job, but because of her dynamic personality and her fun hobbies.
@cauthoncrazy
@cauthoncrazy 3 жыл бұрын
Yup, I know a few woman like this and seeing them content gives me something to consider in my own life.
@michelefair1577
@michelefair1577 3 жыл бұрын
I love this!! 🙌🏻
@VictoriaWonders
@VictoriaWonders 3 жыл бұрын
this is such a relief, but don we all!!??
@hannahmayo6582
@hannahmayo6582 3 жыл бұрын
“She makes me think new thoughts.” This is such a refreshing, inspiring, and wholesome idea 🙏🏻
@tusharmulchandani3658
@tusharmulchandani3658 3 жыл бұрын
I admire her too, thank you
@ibrahimpasha8229
@ibrahimpasha8229 2 жыл бұрын
I work as a software engineer. I could care less about the work, it’s just a paycheck to me but I have a startup on the side which I get enjoyment out of and I’m proud of making that effort/work part of my identity because it’s mine. Even when it’s hard/exhausting. I never understood when people are so passionate about other peoples companies. I couldn’t care less.
@62serpens
@62serpens 2 жыл бұрын
Stockholm syndrome
@audrey-zd5dm
@audrey-zd5dm 2 жыл бұрын
Lmao true
@makeupgirl8886
@makeupgirl8886 2 жыл бұрын
I think people find themselves working so hard because they can't afford to retire (live the life they want) if they don't. I don't think it has much to do with the company they work for.
@emmawhateverr
@emmawhateverr 3 жыл бұрын
The fact that my ENTIRE family (my mom, my brother, and my sister) quit their jobs this year/last year to follow their dreams and take a risk speaks volumes!!! YOLO!!!
@loliwelch9151
@loliwelch9151 Жыл бұрын
Curious to hear updates! 🙂
@Imafoxygirl
@Imafoxygirl 3 жыл бұрын
My ex girlfriend asked “what do you want to do with your life?” I said, “ I wish I could never work again” and that alarmed her.
@p.t.9171
@p.t.9171 3 жыл бұрын
I feel you, people really thunk all of us should be working to the bine like no. I just want to live :/
@JemimaDoesASMR
@JemimaDoesASMR 3 жыл бұрын
Because there's like, a balance. Working all day every day is not healthy and not fulfilling for most people. But there's a reason so many people fall into despair after retirement, because generativity, or feeling like you're being productive or contributing, is really important. It doesn't have to be in the form of a career, a lot of people like volunteering or other passion projects, but like, just wanting to have unlimited money and goof off all day genuinely isn't fulfilling.
@Imafoxygirl
@Imafoxygirl 3 жыл бұрын
@@JemimaDoesASMR I think it’s all about perspective. Some people might love goofing off and living a carefree life if that exists. But I know what you mean. Being a part of something bigger than you is fulfilling
@fluffyrat4440
@fluffyrat4440 3 жыл бұрын
In her defense, we're not yet at a world where we can afford to not work, unfortunately; I feel like your ex might've been worried that she'd have to devote her life to earning and taking care of somebody who won't provide anything in return for the rest of her life. And that sucks, yk, that that's the alternative to not working, but I feel like we shouldnt look down on her for feeling alarmed when this is still the world we live in
@denide8921
@denide8921 3 жыл бұрын
@@solarydays exactly.
@Selectraf
@Selectraf 3 жыл бұрын
If I didn't have to work I would: -work on healing my PTSD -learn how to write music -read, read, read -go on hikes and nature adventures -cook and grow food -spend time with my loved ones
@numbskulled1984
@numbskulled1984 3 жыл бұрын
and have children *preach*
@poppyseed7639
@poppyseed7639 3 жыл бұрын
Already doing it and the happiness isn't there
@factsverse9957
@factsverse9957 3 жыл бұрын
@@poppyseed7639 get some help, I guess, open up
@poppyseed7639
@poppyseed7639 3 жыл бұрын
@@factsverse9957 that's not nice
@ErosVDeus
@ErosVDeus 3 жыл бұрын
@@poppyseed7639 I don't believe they intended it in a nasty way? If you're doing stuff that should make you happy and it's not making you happy, then getting help about it would probably be a good idea. Help should never be a bad thing.
@HahtaanDaetori
@HahtaanDaetori 3 жыл бұрын
We need leisure, sleep and good health. Ironically these things make us more productive workers but make us look lazy. Most of us experience constant stress, worry, and busy-ness. A great many of us experience anxiety, depression. So, our bodies need rest, our minds need rest. And yet, we are so terrified of falling behind, not measuring up, not fitting in, or discovering that we’re unworthy or unlovable, that we fill every single moment of every single day with SOMETHING. Which leads us to numbness, dissociating, disconnecting, exhaustion, and burnout. You are not lazy. You deserve to rest. You deserve to slow down. You deserve nourish yourself: to sleep, to eat, to play, to have fun, to feel good. You never have to earn those things because those things are what it means to be human.
@blue_samurai_zero
@blue_samurai_zero 3 жыл бұрын
It seems like Americans ask two different questions. "What do you do?" is an abbreviation of "What do you do for a living?", meaning to make money. To ask about interests and hobbies separate from employment, the question is "What do you like to do?" If the two answers overlap, that's a different topic which she addressed.
@Wearysiren3
@Wearysiren3 2 жыл бұрын
Love the third question, going to use that from now on!
@shineymcshine5026
@shineymcshine5026 2 жыл бұрын
Sometimes i question myself “should i leave America 🇺🇸 & move to 🇨🇦 ? Or live in 🇳🇴? 🇩🇰? 🇸🇪? Although these countries do have issues (like any country would) their actually more organized & have a different type of respect for the people who live in these places. These countries are Kicking Americas🇺🇸 ass right now. These countries seem very humble & not so “pyramid scheme” “ladder climbing” type mentality.
@skeingamepodcast5993
@skeingamepodcast5993 3 жыл бұрын
My husband was diagnosed with cancer 5 years ago. We had been saving and saving to buy a sailboat to live on so we could cruise the world. We had to use our savings to live off of as I had had a stroke a few months before his diagnosis (we were 36 and 24 at the time). When he went into remission we sold our house and moved into a truck camper. All 88 sq ft of freedom. While out roadtripping we stumbled upon a beautiful sailboat. A few months later, she was out home. It's been 3 years of tiny living and 2 years on the boat (upgrade to 100 sq ft). We wouldn't change it for anything. It's a real privilege to have this life and be out living our dreams at 40.
@sautrah
@sautrah 3 жыл бұрын
💕💕💕
@Furyswipes
@Furyswipes 3 жыл бұрын
You are living the dream!
@Alinda1308
@Alinda1308 3 жыл бұрын
Beautiful!
@avidhossanmansur9830
@avidhossanmansur9830 3 жыл бұрын
Guess I need to get myself cancer to escape my rat life lmao.
@Pimp-Master
@Pimp-Master 3 жыл бұрын
Sounds like the story for the modern poor.
@SparklesNJazz
@SparklesNJazz 3 жыл бұрын
a wise older friend told me “everything you do in your life is your career.” totally changed me. 💞
@eatingthesystemblog
@eatingthesystemblog 3 жыл бұрын
Love this
@diamondsngunns88
@diamondsngunns88 3 жыл бұрын
Beautiful!
@marjiew
@marjiew 3 жыл бұрын
l love this!!
@irenemigliaccio
@irenemigliaccio 3 жыл бұрын
That's a really good one 💓
@yulsatriadi9793
@yulsatriadi9793 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing this beautiful ❤️
@screwgravity100
@screwgravity100 3 жыл бұрын
Small note about Cottage Fairy - she said in one video that her parents support her financialy. I think it is important that people know about it, so they don't compare their lifes to her.
@LouisaRubyDDD
@LouisaRubyDDD 3 жыл бұрын
I’m a dance teacher and yesterday I got asked if it was my ultimate dream to open up my own dance studio. And in my mind, I thought “Well I don’t know.” I find it strange how everyone expects us to have this huge end goal for our careers when I am just living and working in the present.
@Jamhael1
@Jamhael1 3 ай бұрын
Yes! Your answer is the best! No one can see the future, so why making up answers about something that NO ONE knows?
@beeweasell
@beeweasell 3 жыл бұрын
When I was a kid I dreamed about being a designer, and now I am one. However, when you work at your dream job, that job becomes your life, because your passion is your job. I found that making your hobby a job is a double edge sword, because at one hand you enjoy what you do, but at the other hand you no longer have that hobby to decompress...
@elie8680
@elie8680 3 жыл бұрын
Hi I’m a graphic designer, and what you say is really true. But I’ve also found that I love designing when its for me, and when I can do it freely. But I’m almost done with my master year, and I’m scared that I don’t love it enough to take on all the stress that goes with it. When I have to design work for school it becomes like an obligation and I start to dislike it. So I’m scared that I’m ruining my love for designing by making it my job.
@jiliciar.1423
@jiliciar.1423 3 жыл бұрын
@@elie8680 I think you are ruining it because I use to love learning Spanish so I took that as one of my subjects at high school/secondary school and I hate it now. I wanna get back to learning it but I think I'll have to learn another language first so that I can have that passion to go back into Spanish again. I wanna learn French so I'll start with that then introduce Spanish back.
@elie8680
@elie8680 3 жыл бұрын
@@jiliciar.1423 Yes I agree, maybe I should take a little brake after I graduate to find that passion again, thanks!
@GirlWithThePlumbobTattoo
@GirlWithThePlumbobTattoo 3 жыл бұрын
SO. TRUE.
@LifeFilmz
@LifeFilmz 3 жыл бұрын
This is exactly why I want to make my passions/hobbies my side hustle and not my main hustle. That way I can create on my own terms and not out of obligation. My main job is to be of service to others but I don’t want to be treated like a work horse cause I can’t service others if my own needs aren’t prioritized.
@boldandbrash1990
@boldandbrash1990 3 жыл бұрын
I used to have mental breakdowns at 14 because I didn't have a dream career and didn't know how I was gonna support myself growing up. Now I'm 20 and I'm pretty much lost.
@OpqHMg
@OpqHMg 3 жыл бұрын
Can relate. I was so depressed when I was 15 and started learning economics... And felt like there was only meaningless gloom awaiting me. But let me tell you I'm 29 now and happy :) because I'm working a job now that j don't hate. Don't know how it'll go in the future but that was my hope, to be able to feel comfortable and not worry about being able to afford basic necessities or things to enjoy. It's possible to end up with a decent job without a dream career too!
@hwlsgrl
@hwlsgrl 3 жыл бұрын
@@OpqHMg whats the job
@ChristianVBlue3
@ChristianVBlue3 3 жыл бұрын
Learn a trade. Way better than college
@boldandbrash1990
@boldandbrash1990 3 жыл бұрын
@@ChristianVBlue3 Go back to reddit
@ChristianVBlue3
@ChristianVBlue3 3 жыл бұрын
@@boldandbrash1990 Keep being lost I guess 🤷🏻‍♂️
@HowToWatchMovies
@HowToWatchMovies 3 жыл бұрын
I haven't been in touch with this kind of thinking since I finished college. I'd actually started to feel that this kind of thinking just couldn't survive "the real world" since I hadn't seen it out here. Thrilled to have found your channel!
@TiffanyYang0809
@TiffanyYang0809 3 жыл бұрын
this video felt like a painful yet gentle calling out to my current existence and my parent's and their parents, parents.... i always found it so odd that my mom would come home EXHAUSTED and say that she loves her work and it brings her joy, but I see how much it stresses her out...it could be a multitude of reasons as well but this video opened my eyes to a lot
@CHK12319
@CHK12319 3 жыл бұрын
Ive felt this way my entire life. The word “career” actually gives me a pit in my stomach and makes me cringe. Ive never understood why people want a “career.” Life is about relationships, health, wellbeing, and personal growth in my opinion. Id rather live simply than slave away my time at a company.
@Becky0494
@Becky0494 3 жыл бұрын
Yeah, people doing jobs that we literally cannot live without (doctors, nurses, engineers) are just empty shills for companies... I get what you’re saying, but people need to work so people like you can sit on your phone (designed and manufactured by engineers, programmers, marketers) and complain about having to go to a job
@CHK12319
@CHK12319 3 жыл бұрын
@@Becky0494 I’m not saying rewarding jobs that truly make a difference are empty. But climbing some corporate latter for status is not the path for me. Many (not all) corporate jobs have very little positive impact on society. And meanwhile, motherhood has been degraded while women are told they need to “have it all” to justify their worth and are encouraged to pursue a stressful career while someone else raises their kids. Motherhood is a job that “we literally cannot live without” yet society does not act like its worthwhile. Also, I am a marketer (purposefully part time and I live frugally to afford the pay cut) and I promise you it is not a job that has any meaning or higher value. Id give up my phone in a heart beat.
@walking_introvert
@walking_introvert 3 жыл бұрын
Venus Project, Zeitgeist Movement, Peter Joseph, Jacque Fresco, Free World Charter, and the 14 hour TROMsite documentary helped me know that what I was feeling all along was correct. Funny how people cheer for a system that brings war profiteers, prisons for profit, and a system that creates a multitude of crappy and unhealthy products just so we can have jobs. Some people would volunteer to help in our hospitals, become doctors, help the elderly for the joy of helping others. Not everyone would sit around and play video games. Automation and AI will one day render most jobs useless and resources on a finite planet cannot allow the system to continue. Watch Paradise or Oblivion on KZbin.
@mikaela9799
@mikaela9799 3 жыл бұрын
@@walking_introvert What are these documentaries about?
@walking_introvert
@walking_introvert 3 жыл бұрын
@@mikaela9799 they are all based on a better way of organized society for the better of all humans, the environment, and treating the world and its resources as a whole. Look on KZbin for "Paradise or Oblivion" for a overview. You can then google search for the others. There are also tons of youtube videos of Jacque Fresco on different topics. All of those I listed believe that a monetary system or even a society based on trade will always result in poverty, war, violence, etc.
@Calikid331
@Calikid331 3 жыл бұрын
I literally cannot see myself working at a 9-5 job for the rest of my life and being happy. Life is too short to waste it doing things for someone else who doesn't care about my well being.
@DrWhom
@DrWhom 3 жыл бұрын
it is not your boss's job to care for your wellbeing however, you are right, if you do not want to do "things for someone else" you need to start working for yourself. the trick is to be able to do this and not starve!
@tgtgtgtgtgtgtg
@tgtgtgtgtgtgtg 3 жыл бұрын
Yeah, no. Because after doing your hygiene, eating, and striving for 8 hours of sleep, you have no time to live. You’re living for the weekends where likely you’re spending those days cleaning, and running errands or whatnot. And that’s IF you have a stable 9-5. Don’t even get me started on the other side that works these low paying jobs with no benefits that see no issue in scheduling you for an opening shift right after a closing shift. Like wtf? I’ve been pushed to lie and say I have a kid just to get a decent schedule with respect to my wellbeing.
@zs2302
@zs2302 3 жыл бұрын
@@DrWhom It should be. Because if I'm giving you my time and energy - most precious thing, I expect more than some paper. I expect fairness at the least.
@monkey6207
@monkey6207 3 жыл бұрын
I think most people are broken from going to school all day everyday. I was homeschooled and will find a way out. I will never get a full time job; never!
@luxekook
@luxekook 3 жыл бұрын
@@monkey6207 Same. I was also homeschooled and only did a couple years of online school that destroyed my mental health. We can find a way out of this. A job is not our purpose... We are bigger than this shit.
@fabb2527
@fabb2527 3 жыл бұрын
For a long time, my identity was based on my job title and how much money I made. After this past year, and after my position was eliminated, I had to take a step back and evaluate myself and what I want for the future. A job or my own business that pays the bills, and the flexibility to do what I want. I no longer need a title to feel fulfilled. I am valuable! Gen-xer here.
@Unicorn2014Clever
@Unicorn2014Clever 3 жыл бұрын
I am a dental student right now and have always "known" this is the path I will be eventually taking, not because I like it, but because from a very young age I was manipulated into believing this is what I want. I wasn't a bright independent kid so I didn't gave it a second thought about what I was constantly told, but now that I have grown to create my own philosophy of life and have my own definition of success, I see how unhappy I am with the path I have chosen. I want to give it up but unfortunately I am still dealing with a lot of external influences that it makes it hard to follow what I truely want in life. I am currently studying for a supposedly prestigious carreer that giving it up is socially considered a huge mistake. ("You will like the money you will earn later", "you will be called a doctor, people respect that", "it isn't easy to get to this place so be thankful", and many more comments I have heard) So I am holding on to it since according to everyone else it is the right path. I don't care about what others think, but when you hear continuously that it is a mistake you will eventually regret if you give up now, you really start to question your decision and get scared if you will really regret it later once there is no way back to it anymore. I am really glad I came across this video, where it is very accurately put in words how much worth the society puts into carreer and productivity associated with it that the real meaning of life and the real identity of people is being overshadowed.
@stoogey1
@stoogey1 3 жыл бұрын
I buried my mom, dad, brother, uncle and grandad from the age of 9-13. I'm 42 now and my passion is to help kids going through now what I went through in my childhood and help them through their grieving in a good and healthy way. I'm in the process of starting a vtuber channel and sharing my life experiences and tips I've learned myself and from other people. For kids who's going through the grieving process, they feel alone and I'm going to be there to help them.
@KaliKali-hv9bt
@KaliKali-hv9bt 3 жыл бұрын
@stogey1 wow! You sound amazing. That is such fulfilling and helpful purpose you have there.
@KaitlinGaspar
@KaitlinGaspar 3 жыл бұрын
my cousin just lost both their parents and i’m really struggling to help them through their grief-
@stoogey1
@stoogey1 3 жыл бұрын
@@KaitlinGaspar One website to look up is mourning hope. It's a childhood grief counseling service. They have a camp every summer to help process grieving in a positive way. Healthygamergg has a discord where they can talk about it too, if that helps.
@Nonyah123
@Nonyah123 3 жыл бұрын
Wow, I wonder if you've ever considered getting certified as a counsellor? That experience would be invaluable
@kittyykatie
@kittyykatie 3 жыл бұрын
that sounds great 🥺
@Quintussmit
@Quintussmit 3 жыл бұрын
I spent my 20's and 30's working very hard to get everything I wanted. I missed the first 6 years of my daughter because I left when it was still dark and came home long after her bedtime. I have a house, two cars, swimming pool, daughter in private school, the whole thing. Then, during the lockdown, for the first time I was forced to actually sit in my garden. I was looking out over the pool, having a coffee and listening to the birds signing, and realized I don't get any joy from it. All my possessions are chains, I don't own it, it owns me. When I swim with my kid, I only see the dirt on the bottom that still needs to be cleaned, when I sit in the garden, I only see the grass that needs to be cut, walking though the house I only see the paint that needs to be redone, the new crack that needs to be filled etc. So I quit my job, started my own thing and I am moving to Europe with my family to travel and see all the things we always wanted to see. My daughter will be home schooled and hope that I can teach her to NEVER, EVER, get caught up in the brainwashed dreams we are sold by society.
@anshaguila8393
@anshaguila8393 3 жыл бұрын
This is so beautiful. I love that you're taking your daughter away from the atmosphere of propaganda. When in school you get fed with nothing but the "only way to success" narrative which is very close minded and employee orientated
@HahtaanDaetori
@HahtaanDaetori 3 жыл бұрын
Yes, we are told that if we buy this external thing that we will fix internal problems. The make us think we need these things to be "successful" or happy. We work to survive, and the corperations (or whoever) we work for love it when we hustle and base our self worth in how productive (in this context) we are. But we need to see that the system needs to change, inequalities need to be challenged, so our lives aren't just about working for some cooperation, and we can't just ignore it. We need to collectively bring change to liberate every worker from being wage slaves.
@nondescriptbeing5944
@nondescriptbeing5944 3 жыл бұрын
These ideas in movie form: Fight Club. lol
@blackmanops3749
@blackmanops3749 3 жыл бұрын
Congratulations.
@Quintussmit
@Quintussmit 3 жыл бұрын
@@nondescriptbeing5944 You broke the first rule
@natramirez099
@natramirez099 2 жыл бұрын
Oh girl, you are wise beyond your years! Love this video so much! I'm changing careers at 39 from 13 years in education. Found you as I'm exploring Edtech Sales. Love teaching a lot, and not totally burnt out, love the kids, but knew when I got into it that I would not be doing one thing for 30+ years, and at the time I wanted to teach for a while but recently I've started to outgrow my container. Don't over plan for the long term. Go with what brings you joy and fulfillment now, carve out time for joy and fulfillment outside of work life, and adapt and grow as you evolve!
@LynetteAdkins
@LynetteAdkins 3 жыл бұрын
This video is sooo good. When you read from Goodbye, Again I also identified with those passages and it made me really sad. Unlearning our tendencies to align our identities with our productivity/work is an active battle, but I'm so glad so many of us are doing it and speaking on it. & thanks for the mention!❤️
@Jillianrc
@Jillianrc 3 жыл бұрын
I just got a new job at a vet hospital, and my mom sat me down and was talking to me about how I can make it into a career. She said surely it’s not your “dream job” and I told her my dream job is to stay home and take care of my family and home. She was saying all of these things about going back to school and I haven’t even had my first day yet. The pay is very good, and my husband makes quite a bit more so we are actually doing really well even without my new income. We’ve really been realizing how money and status obsessed our parents are. They’re always trying to get us to spend money and go out, and we are very frugal by nature. We value time together and minimal living over killing ourselves to work two careers.
@denisadellinger4543
@denisadellinger4543 3 жыл бұрын
Staying home is not a crime. Raising little ones is the most fulfilling thing you can do because young people are so lost today because their parents had to work and was not there for them. I think your new job sounds wonderful. In my generation, mothers stayed home and were housewives and mothers. I was better for it. then when I got up to about sixth grade, she got a job at my school. She worked another 30 years and was fulfilled. If you are able to do that, do it. You can alway go back to work later. The job at the vet sounds great.
@Myrslokstok
@Myrslokstok 3 жыл бұрын
You will tank yourself later! The kids puke 🤮 down the new car anyway, and it is still the best car.
@phyllisbooth3395
@phyllisbooth3395 3 жыл бұрын
I am a 60 year old and I was a homemaker at a time when it was not popular in the 1990s and early 2000s. Still volunteer, drive an old car, live in a modest house, go to rummage sales, and I love my life choice living a simple life and enjoy our grown sons and my husband of 36 years. And young lady I totally support YOUR CHOICE.
@FruityUnicorn17
@FruityUnicorn17 3 жыл бұрын
@@phyllisbooth3395 Thank you Phyllis. It’s so hard to find this kind of advice nowadays.
@nafeesahassan5469
@nafeesahassan5469 3 жыл бұрын
stay home then:)
@Sophia-ix2ri
@Sophia-ix2ri 3 жыл бұрын
I quit my corporate job at a tech company for exactly this reason. Everyone thinks I’m crazy for not having a new job lined up, but I know I need space in order to figure out who I am and what I want. I used to be such a workaholic that it gave me cancer, which I am grateful for, since it helped me see my true priorities. When you confront death in your twenties, you start thinking, “am I okay with this being my legacy?” That’s when I realized living to work was not living and my soul needed more than that.
@moon_mint
@moon_mint 3 жыл бұрын
Respect. What an awesome story.
@ClayMastah344
@ClayMastah344 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your testimony Sophia. I’m very glad you’re still here with us, to find what makes you happy
@Hannah-nh5qj
@Hannah-nh5qj 3 жыл бұрын
What do you mean when saying “I used to be such a workaholic that it gave me cancer” ??
@Sophia-ix2ri
@Sophia-ix2ri 3 жыл бұрын
@@Hannah-nh5qjFor many years I worked 12+ hour days in a toxic work environment. During that time I developed an extremely rare cancer with no known cause, no genetic or other medical explanation other than perhaps stress/trauma from (among other things) my work. Gabor Mate has some interesting things to say about stress and illness. Perhaps it was just bad luck, but in that case I still put off getting a lump checked because I was trying so hard to be productive instead.
@michelen5728
@michelen5728 3 жыл бұрын
@@Sophia-ix2ri Good Luck Sophiii!!! Stay safe
@still5853
@still5853 3 жыл бұрын
I really appreciate you talking about this. I actually stopped watching this channel back when it was very work-oriented, because it was just too much for me, and I said "well, good for her, but I'm out" (and also because I knew I wouldn't be able to have the same insanely high work ethic, so I didn't want to feel bad about myself). It's so cool to see you grow out of the super-work-oriented mindset that this channel was all about - there really is a huge difference in you 6 years ago and now, and it's definitely a positive difference. Thank you for updating us, it's really exciting to see you grow and to get to grow with you as well throughout the years.
@solomio7166
@solomio7166 2 жыл бұрын
I'm so glad to see this concept FINALLY taking root! When I was in my 20's I job hopped to experience different work environments. At that time I was certain that -- eventually -- I would find "The One" career for which I was destined (despite ridicule by my peers and the establishment). Alas, that singular career never happened. Now in my late 50's, I realize that perhaps I was actually on to something! To this day, I remain a generalist and feel appreciated for my diverse knowledge base and skill set.
@stiles9635
@stiles9635 3 жыл бұрын
I know someone who was so moved by a story about missed opportunities, that he literally dropped out of his bachelor's degree and worked on a fishing boat for 2 years. He now has his PhD and is working on a pretty cool physics project, but also is the most happy go lucky and laid back person I know. I feel like he discovered the truth about balancing work and happiness.
@queenofalltheflowers2290
@queenofalltheflowers2290 3 жыл бұрын
What was the story? I want to read it, and good for him, that’s amazing!
@Akihiko-senpai
@Akihiko-senpai 3 жыл бұрын
That's a badass move right there 💯
@janacagle2141
@janacagle2141 3 жыл бұрын
How did you take care of the essentials while working on the boat. Did he live with mom? Did his gf pay his bills? How did he buy the parts for the boat?
@somebicycle6684
@somebicycle6684 3 жыл бұрын
My mom has been doing laundry for a nursing home for 25 years. When people ask her how she has stayed that long she says, "I leave my brains at the door when I come in, and pick them up when i leave."
@erichopham
@erichopham 3 жыл бұрын
Well someone has to do it, it might be a boring sounding job but it’s definitely important!
@101ineke
@101ineke 3 жыл бұрын
Thats the spirit you work to live, not they orther way
@erynhilditch675
@erynhilditch675 3 жыл бұрын
Yup work as a barista and its the exact same for me. I work here to pay my bills and pay for the creative work I do on the side
@deroil7270
@deroil7270 3 жыл бұрын
I got a job as UPS truck loader, I get to exercise for a few hours a day, make some decent money, and get to be alone with my thoughts for a bit 👌
@a.wanderer5006
@a.wanderer5006 3 жыл бұрын
This is kind of why i liked manual labor jobs even though I'm a journalist now. You just put in your time and don't have job stress. A cognitive job consumes your thoughts all the time.
@rachelina97
@rachelina97 3 жыл бұрын
Omg YES 100% YES. To everything. And that editors note... yes!!! It just does not make sense. And younger generations (millennial and all those who follow) are criticized for being “lazy” but really we are all burnt out before graduation and just don’t see the sense in slaving away our lives just so we can finally enjoy it during our final years. There are so SO many other options, alternative routes. So much life to live and love.
@Qbala97
@Qbala97 3 жыл бұрын
I think that the problem with "if [...] you had all your needs met, what would you do" question is that not many people are passionate about cleaning streets, assembling electronics in factories, collecting fruits and vegetables on farms, working as cashiers, being construction worker or plumber, or accountant. If everyone had all their needs met without working we will probably have so many amazing cooks, but nothing to eat. That said I completely agree that "live to work" mindset is super toxic and destructive and that it is the best to keep work-life balance. But it has to be *balance*, because you are not only working to live, but also working so others can live.
@naeness
@naeness 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you, I'm not American so I kinda don't understand some opinions, I agree people should work lesser or shouldn't be exploited but is kinda clear you can't have a super high quality of life (as I think most americans want) if you are working at McDonalds, realistically your daily life is based on the work of a bunch of people, the food you eat, the computer you use, your building, the water, the electricity, everything is made of labor and on many ocassions of years of studies, all of that is just not equivalent to what you do on some jobs. Sometimes I see people complaining about jobs that pay too much meanwhile others pay too little (which can be wrong), but like a job you can take without any experience and a job you can take with 4-5 years of university and a inversion of thousands and thousands of dollars in education is clearly going to pay more. And also isn't people supposed to work only 8h per day on a decent job? Or is it much worst there? Literally my dreams are to have no homework after 5pm (like my father who has a good job). I feel like anyone who has gone throw school (7h of class + 4-5h of homework per day)/ University( good luck if you sleep, literally 3:45 am procrastinating a lagrange multiplier video) and doesn't have some illness can take 8h of work. You know what really bothers me? Having to pay almost an apartment worth of money for education or seeing people investing their time and money on education to be a teacher, have a PhD or something and literally make not reasonable amount of money for their effort (not necessarily on the states but on some countries), also people having amazing talents or ideas for business and just not having enought opportunity given to them or putting the effort and not going anywhere because you don't know the right people.
@BriannaxDash
@BriannaxDash 2 жыл бұрын
I don’t know if I agree that ppl aren’t passionate about farming or plumping etc. and that these aren’t things that ppl do to find happiness
@bridie1824
@bridie1824 3 жыл бұрын
I always hate that the first question someone asks you when you first meet them is "So what do you do for work?" And not "So what are your passions/ hobbies"
@mikem2022
@mikem2022 2 жыл бұрын
Try telling that to a girl as a dude she'd walk away faster then you can say "hi" to her if you don't make six figures and drive an Audi
@murraymanitos
@murraymanitos 3 жыл бұрын
I think that one aspect that not enough people talk about is the fact that in the modern world, if you want to have and support a family with kids it is VERY difficult to avoid selling your soul to a corporation. It's one thing when you're choosing between a career and a bigger house or a nicer car. It's quite another when you're choosing between a career and an education for or medical care for your children.
@tirecs04
@tirecs04 3 жыл бұрын
The day will come when birth rates are so low, every country will need to incentivize having children. It's already happening in some countries. Although, that doesn't mean the world would be better off for it when some people just shouldn't be parents.
@yellowsparklefish337
@yellowsparklefish337 3 жыл бұрын
This is why my country (Denmark) was named the happiest country in the world: With free education (actually, you get paid for taking one) and free healthcare, people don't have to choose between family and work to the same degree that they do in the US. We have so much freedom here, I hope the citizens of the US will realise that taxing the rich isn't a step backwards when it comes to the freedom of the common people
@koipen
@koipen 3 жыл бұрын
@@yellowsparklefish337 *Finland but close enough :p
@guillll
@guillll 3 жыл бұрын
In most rich countries (and a bunch of poorer ones) you don't have to choose, because education and medical care are free or very cheap. That's why voting for the right people is important.
@Pixiee_Stardust
@Pixiee_Stardust 3 жыл бұрын
Good point!
@201alexi
@201alexi 3 жыл бұрын
My dream life is living in a comfortable, spacious, cozy wood house in the forest and spend my day reading and writing and trying on my infinite list of interest (pottery, woodworking, gardening, herbalism, research more on communication field). Then at night, I would invite my friends in, cook for then, drink wine and talk and dance
@Ava_Eve
@Ava_Eve 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this video Kath! This video needed so desperately to be put out here right in this time period. I've been saying all of this same stuff for all of my life to people. The purpose of life is to enjoy it, love it, feel it. This is your gift. To help people love their life through you loving yours.
@sarahmotozaki7167
@sarahmotozaki7167 3 жыл бұрын
2015 Katherine: Soo high schoolers you should start making your LinkedIn before it's too late! 2021 Katherine: I want LinkedIn ANNIHILATED
@kxlot79
@kxlot79 3 жыл бұрын
Growth.
@LiLBitsDK
@LiLBitsDK 3 жыл бұрын
experience, growth and self respect
@PilferedRose
@PilferedRose 3 жыл бұрын
What’s sad is that I think more people would come to this same conclusion if they had the time and emotional energy to do more introspection. But when I get home from work, my mind is so empty and I’m so exhausted, the last thing I want to do is reevaluate my life choices and find out I’m wasting my life so my boss can enjoy theirs.
@mechanomics2649
@mechanomics2649 3 жыл бұрын
I mean, even if you have the time and energy, it only does just so much good. You still have to eat and keep the lights on.
@PilferedRose
@PilferedRose 3 жыл бұрын
I get exactly 6 and a half hours to enjoy myself at home between work and sleep. Where am I supposed to squeeze in an existential crisis??
@PilferedRose
@PilferedRose 3 жыл бұрын
@Dustin Rathke that’s the truth tho
@thembones9268
@thembones9268 3 жыл бұрын
It's easy to see one's boss as the evil corporate overlord, when he could well be just as dead inside, except with a higher salary at the cost of even more work and responsibilities. Having a subordinate doesn't mean your fixed salary magically turns into stocks.
@PilferedRose
@PilferedRose 3 жыл бұрын
@@thembones9268 no I understand, I’m using “boss” as short hand for upper level management. My direct managers are both sweethearts who I don’t fault at all. They have zero control over my pay and benefits since I’m a contract employee. The people who control my work site aren’t allowing permanent employees to be hired, so they’re not even allowed to bring me on permanently at the moment. They’re more who I’m talking about.
@CandiBookish
@CandiBookish 3 жыл бұрын
I have been struggling with this concept my whole life to the point where I have multiple degrees so I can find that “dream career “ just to find that it really doesn’t exist. I currently work as a tutor helping children learn to read and I really enjoy my job but it is only a small part of who I am as a person. I’m still discovering who I am and what I want it to look like.
@baltasislietuvos
@baltasislietuvos Ай бұрын
There is a saying in ex-USSR countries: in a collective farm the horse is working the most, but never becomes a farm's CEO.
@marilynmonheaux6356
@marilynmonheaux6356 3 жыл бұрын
I got fired from a job I worked for ten years and I realized I never spent any money because I worked 12-16 hour days for the last decade. Now I’m moving to Spain to take long naps during the day and read Ernest Hemingway.
@psykonautt
@psykonautt 3 жыл бұрын
have fun
@amilliev.6131
@amilliev.6131 3 жыл бұрын
heck yah ! enjoy !
@asanabright538
@asanabright538 3 жыл бұрын
Congratulations on your liberation. Enjoy it without a care, you have earned it.
@Adrianaxo.
@Adrianaxo. 3 жыл бұрын
@@asanabright538 this is awesome!
@maureen9605
@maureen9605 3 жыл бұрын
as someone working as a nurse, the identity issue hits HARD. throughout school and at the beginning of my first job, I lived and breathed nursing. it was a huge source of pride and purpose for me, and this mindset was aggressively cultivated in school and at my job. I think healthcare, especially in the age of the pandemic, there's an insidious culture of guilt when you don't devote yourself completely to your job. don't you care about your patients? didn't you become a nurse to help people? I sure did! but not at the expense of my own enjoyment, well-being, and self-worth. at the end of the day, my job is just my job. I love what I do, but it is not who I am and it's SO liberating to finally feel this way after years of being told otherwise.
@user-rz8vp1bd2y
@user-rz8vp1bd2y 3 жыл бұрын
Wow so true!!!!! I’m about to start residency and the issue is so real.
@evie9629
@evie9629 3 жыл бұрын
Make sense!
@Danielle-Mah
@Danielle-Mah 3 жыл бұрын
I love and value that you’re a nurse! I also agree that is not the only thing that defines who you are but throughout the pandemic there are so many people who are grateful for you!
@moon_mint
@moon_mint 3 жыл бұрын
THIS. Other nurses have given me so much hell for saying "a nurse isn't all that I am, there's a lot more to me" because it's universally believed that once you graduate nursing school, THAT is your core identity. SUPER unhealthy.
@ameliawiseman1158
@ameliawiseman1158 3 жыл бұрын
I’m a student nurse and there’s so much pressure to live and breathe your job then just sleep and do nothing at home. I want to complete my nursing course I really love it. But I’m not sure wether I’ll do it for the rest of my life as as an autistic person it’s v hard for anxiety especially when some nurses and everything but I’d love to do another job along w bank nursing (so choosing my shifts whenever and doing another alongside , like my own business)
@fernandabrandao8240
@fernandabrandao8240 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for your sharing! I’m 23 and yesterday I was thinking I’m a failure bc I can’t even picture what’s my “dream job”, really frustrated and now I’m feeling calmer and less ET about it. Again, thank you.
@callheryasmin21
@callheryasmin21 3 жыл бұрын
I love this video!! Thank you for this. I went to nursing school for 5 years, graduated left the profession 2 years later. Lets also normalize the fact that you do NOT need to stay in a career because you've invested so much in the eduction for said career! Do things that you want to do and enjoy. Life is too short.
@iceetas
@iceetas 3 жыл бұрын
ok yes, ever since i was a kid and everyone was talking about their dream job and i never had one. i was always jealous of Barbie bc she worked like every job, she didn't have a career just worked whatever job she wanted but never let it be her life, her life was being fabulous!! i especially hate jobs that require you to take your work home... no no no! it's not my life. that's another reason i don't want a career but i am scared of graduating college next year bc i realized i have to figure something out lmao
@mckenziejeanne4508
@mckenziejeanne4508 3 жыл бұрын
I feel this comment SO MUCH. I wanted to do everything, like Barbie, and be fabulous. :) Still do. It makes post-grad stuff really stressful, though. 😅 I'm in the same boat as you.
@themellowbutterfly_2446
@themellowbutterfly_2446 3 жыл бұрын
I feel you sis, I'm in 11th grade. Doing school to go to uni when I already know what to do. Barbie is my inspiration 100% I want to be an etiquette consultant and open a charm school eventually because I notice that manners and healthy social etiquette in this day and age is dwindling. In all honesty why can't I go to university in my late 20s early 30s. After 12 years in school I really want to pursue life travel, work in the tourism industry, become a home maker, wife and mother. Then study, because I already know what I want to study, I love learning, I just can't stomach the idea of doing continuous school. Food for thought
@studyn9149
@studyn9149 3 жыл бұрын
and now with online classes, school seem to be 24/7 T-T
@isabellaivy2864
@isabellaivy2864 3 жыл бұрын
That's a great point! Especially when you try to compare to classmates who always knew what they wanted to be. We change so much from high school to university, it a way it doesn't make sense to hold the same career for a lifetime.
@gretas6794
@gretas6794 3 жыл бұрын
This is shedding new light on why I liked barbie so much as a kid hahahha Im graduating next year with a degree in science and French, but I think instead of trying to climb up the career ladder, I’ll go back to school and get a masters of teaching. Being a teacher will of course be challenging but at least it has a purpose and allows you to be a huge part of your community and help people.
@BluuKiss
@BluuKiss 3 жыл бұрын
If I didn't have to work, I would: - exercise regularly and get my myself back to healthy weight - learn to cook meals that are tasty, healthy and nutritious - grow a vegetable garden - keep a pet animal (or two) - draw whatever I want and accept more art commissions - explore outdoors and maybe travel overseas with my partner - maintain a cozy home Edit: To clarify, these are some things i would like to do to occupy my time when I no longer have financial/job insecurity. I get that these things can be done on the side. But as of now, I spend most of my time focused on my job/earning money. To be honest, I rarely ever feel well-rested so I don't pile on more things which might be irresponsible of me to do.
@michaylalovelygal
@michaylalovelygal 3 жыл бұрын
Dream life 😌
@daddy3484
@daddy3484 3 жыл бұрын
So you’d be homeless and drink well water?
@ldive
@ldive 3 жыл бұрын
trust me whenever im not working im just lazing around on my phone or in my bed. working drives majority of us. I do however get spikes of motivation to that stuff. I feel we should we working less (especially japan poor them) and have more of a balance in our lives rather than eliminating one thing thinking it'll better everything.
@NomastiAfricanWarlord
@NomastiAfricanWarlord 3 жыл бұрын
If you didn't work, you wouldn't do any of those things. You'd laze around, do a bunch of half finished projects, and then be bored and listless. I mean think about the times in your life when you did have a lot of downtime? Vacation, lost a job, etc,. The vast majority of us mostly just dicked around. We didn't become productive people. Productive people who truly have the drive to pursue their goals (whether it's health or passions) are going to do them, regardless of whether they work a 9 to 5. People use the existence of their jobs as an excuse not do shit. If you really wanted to exercise. You would do it. If you really wanted to learn how to cook and eat healthier meals, you would do it. If you really wanted to draw more or have another pet, YOU WOULD DO IT.
@carleynorthcoast1915
@carleynorthcoast1915 3 жыл бұрын
People have mentioned they experience lethargy when they have had a period of free time. I think this inevitable because deep down inside you want to have a break from the American style work week. if you have enough time off you get bored and you genuinely want to be productive in some way - that could include cooking and gardening. I think most people who have been in the workforce for more than a decade could use a three to six month vacation. When you do become productive you have to actually make plans have a schedule and even "make" yourself work sometimes You won't always feel like working in the garden.
@seriouslywhatever1031
@seriouslywhatever1031 2 жыл бұрын
I have a list on my phone called "My Real To Do List" full of ideas of things I want to experience, places I wanna go, things I've already done etc. I look at it every day to keep me working towards the life I actually want, and away from the life I think I have to have. There's a KZbin channel you might like called StyleLikeU. A mother and daughter duo interview all kinds of people who break the mold in some way. I find it insightful into the different paths people lead through life. Not just the same old "school, college, work, house, kids, marriage, retire (lol!), die" cycle.
@donnettadavis6809
@donnettadavis6809 3 жыл бұрын
Wow, this is absolutely amazing, sis. Thank you for this topic and video. It truly TRULY resonates with me. I'm learning more and more about how to disconnect from this toxic societal norm in an effort to find a renewed joy.
@Griznant211
@Griznant211 3 жыл бұрын
I'd like to add: We all were told to go to college in high school and then at the age of 17 told to pick that career or else you wouldn't be somebody. And then what? Hope we don't wake up 20years later hoping we didn't just waste our life?
@jaleesa00
@jaleesa00 3 жыл бұрын
Let me tell you at 28 I feel dread ive picked the wrong career path. One I sought out at 17. People are ever changing dynamic human beings, who we are today is not who we were yesterday. I am facing the same dilemma at 28 as I did as a high school graduate. Who knows where this path may lead... Best 💐
@orangeblossom1712
@orangeblossom1712 3 жыл бұрын
I'm a social worker and I feel like my identity is strongly linked to my career. I've realized in therapy that I'm not so much focused on finding happiness but more seeking meaning and purpose. Social work gives me meaning by uplifting others. I'm working on boundaries so I don't get burnt out!
@xdshepard37
@xdshepard37 3 жыл бұрын
Dear Elizabeth, yours is not a career but a calling. My your labor continue to bring healing to the broken hearted and my you find peace (meaning) in doing so.
@dr.n1220
@dr.n1220 3 жыл бұрын
Dear Elizabeth, I’ve resonated with every word you said.The fear of being judged and misunderstood doesn’t allow me to say this out loud to anyone in my life. Thank you for sharing. Much power to you.
@iamjustsaying4787
@iamjustsaying4787 3 жыл бұрын
@Elizabeth Dean Great for you. But what about your children. Maybe they need your full attention.
@ScholarMadDog
@ScholarMadDog 3 жыл бұрын
I definitely resonate with this, Elizabeth. I practice chinese medicine and, like you, it's more about seeking meaning and purpose in helping relieve the suffering of others. I'm definitely getting burned out, though. I've had my own business for just over 10 years and I wish professions like ours could take a 6-12 month sabbatical every 10 years or so!
@HeyMishkaTV
@HeyMishkaTV 3 жыл бұрын
Such a smart and honest video, love it. This mindset is why I went freelance right out of school, affording myself time to experiment and dabble in different hobbies, projects, specialties... I struggled sometimes but always found ways to make money and try new things. I cannot imagine committing to one thing when you're in your early 20s and riding it out. That's why the quarter and mid-life crises exist.
@kajalspandey
@kajalspandey 3 жыл бұрын
I love that question and reframe: what would you spend your life doing if all your needs were met? I think it gives all of us so much permission to explore ourselves, what we love and how we can give/contribute to the world. It really is a question asking us to seek our potential as our "purpose" rather than a career.
@TheDoosh79
@TheDoosh79 3 жыл бұрын
My problem is I am unable to focus on life when I have a job. A job requires about 95% of my mental focus and strength to keep going, which just leaves me mentally exhausted for the other 5% that involves the basic personal care of eating, hygiene and sleeping. The happiest and most content I have ever been is when I have been out of work. It seems to be either or for me, job and no life or a life but no job.
@rosepemberton5262
@rosepemberton5262 3 жыл бұрын
It sounds like your work is burning you out. I used to spend whole weekends just netflixing. Part time job with a side gig when i have the energy seems to work best for me.
@TheDoosh79
@TheDoosh79 3 жыл бұрын
@@rosepemberton5262 Yes, but I've had many different jobs and they all require 100% mental focus to get through. I couldn't afford to live on a part time job, cost of living is too high.
@jesustyronechrist2330
@jesustyronechrist2330 3 жыл бұрын
You're simply overworking. Trust me, the moment you have let's say a month of free time, you realize how little you've actually done that you "wanted" to accomplish while daydreaming. Honestly, we need to work. It balances us out. The most stuff I ever did in my job and free time was when I had a part-time job. I had enough energy for worklife and normal life. I learned to play more of the guitar than I did in an entire summer of just sitting on my ass unemployed just as an example. Too much free time is makes you as lethargic as too much work. Also, cost of living high? I guess you life in a big city?
@dominico3737
@dominico3737 3 жыл бұрын
Thats not normal, some of your habits may be contributing to the lack of energy, find out if there is a problem / what the problem is
@electriclilies2642
@electriclilies2642 3 жыл бұрын
I felt this way and I had undiagnosed ADHD.. That’s definitely not normal
@theuberman7170
@theuberman7170 3 жыл бұрын
This pandemic made many people rethink work. Which is exactly what our society needed.
@sylvie9256
@sylvie9256 3 жыл бұрын
Yessss
@mercyreign969
@mercyreign969 3 жыл бұрын
THANK YOU. Yes. Yessss.
@motherwolf1529
@motherwolf1529 3 жыл бұрын
Nobit made people lazy and sit on their asses at home whether it's receiving government help or working on a computer from home
@motherwolf1529
@motherwolf1529 3 жыл бұрын
Also I'm not a Boomer, I just know the difference between sitting on your ass in front of a screen all day and actually being more active in a real, human, face to face work environment.
@avserenity7240
@avserenity7240 3 жыл бұрын
@@motherwolf1529 No, many employers weren’t paying their employees enough to live and their greed caught up with them. Let’s call a thing a thing. Stop defending this pathetic system.
@creaturespuppet
@creaturespuppet 3 жыл бұрын
I'm so grateful to have come across this video, it really helped me out and affirmed what I've been wondering for a while. Or at least since I dropped out of university last year in the midst of the pandemic and feeling pressured by family to find a new career path I wanna go down. Thank you for making this video and giving me something to think about more
@jonimarie09
@jonimarie09 3 жыл бұрын
I'm an RN and many of my fellow healthcare workers (not everyone) define themselves by their careers and measure themselves by how much stress and chaos they can handle. Afraid to admit the burnout or take time off because of internal guilt. I lost my sense self, I had no idea who I was or what my passions were. Until I set boundaries which have become extremely important for my mental, physical and spiritual well being. I recently saved up money and quit my job to take a much needed break to garden, hike, travel and catch up on the last 7 years of life that I spent just existing. I have no idea what will lies next but I'm so happy that you made this video.
@BooksCauseInsomnia
@BooksCauseInsomnia 3 жыл бұрын
What breaks my heart is that my dad is in the hospital, he is waiting for tests to come back that will tell him if he will be living much longer or not. Guess what? All he does is work from his hospital bed. He hasn't called his siblings or children to tell us how much he loves us. His whole life is his job. It's so extremely sad.
@duncanbug
@duncanbug 3 жыл бұрын
That’s scary... I’m so sorry.
@BooksCauseInsomnia
@BooksCauseInsomnia 3 жыл бұрын
@@duncanbug Thanks. It really is sad. I called him and he talked about how busy he is trying to work from his hospital bed and rushed me off the phone.😭 His life is the exact opposite of the one I want to live.
@__led
@__led 3 жыл бұрын
That’s really sad, I’m sorry. Maybe you can take the time to tel him how much you love him. I don’t know if this is the case for him, but sometimes people work to distract themselves from their feelings. You could always try taking the first step and see how he responds. I hope he’s okay
@BooksCauseInsomnia
@BooksCauseInsomnia 3 жыл бұрын
@@__led Thanks, that's a great idea. I'll try it. He went home yesterday and is now saying he's going to put his health before work. 🤞
@tifking73
@tifking73 3 жыл бұрын
🙏
@elliottpaine9259
@elliottpaine9259 3 жыл бұрын
Adults would ask me as a child: what do you want to be when you grow up? And I would tell them, " I'll let you know when I grow up" it was shell shock for adults to have realize from a child that they aren't mature enough to make that call.
@TheSeth256
@TheSeth256 3 жыл бұрын
It is important to have some goal. Of course you won't 100% perfectly know what will you do in 18 years, but having at least some vague idea really helps you focus on something at least.
@jorritjorik
@jorritjorik 3 жыл бұрын
"What do you want to be when you grow up?" Myself.
@chapacoka
@chapacoka 3 жыл бұрын
@@jorritjorik Alive.
@madisonsingleton5774
@madisonsingleton5774 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for making this video. Was feeling very heavy today, and your video let me know that I am not alone in feeling this way.
@marissatims6980
@marissatims6980 2 жыл бұрын
I'm so glad you are talking about this. I think a lot of people feel this way but tend feel alone and remain silent. 💚
@BarakaGitari
@BarakaGitari 3 жыл бұрын
Every decision I made in childhood was to secure myself a good job. When I couldn't get one it was a rude awakening.
@Nabulu333
@Nabulu333 3 жыл бұрын
🇰🇪🇰🇪
@rozchristopherson648
@rozchristopherson648 3 жыл бұрын
The "haves" are controlling the "have-nots." I'm 60. Seen it all. Just yesterday it seems I was 20 years old in college. Life goes by faster than you ever think it will at age 20. Find a way to separate from the treadmill.
@JohnThePA
@JohnThePA 3 жыл бұрын
Time is flying - never seems to be enough of it
@Merknilash
@Merknilash 3 жыл бұрын
The "haves" have always controlled the "have-nots" The question is do you want to live in a society where being a "have not" means you're living in absolute squalor, like in every fucking communist regime ever tried, or do you want to live in a society where being a "have not" means you have a smartphone that you lazily browse while laying in bed in your air conditioned/heated room and whine about how bad capitalism is?
@zeffery101
@zeffery101 3 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I am 21 and since last year, I am already mentality preparing myself for my 40s. Im thinking what I want to be doing and how to get there. Fuck my 20s, I could care less. Its waning, no point in trying to catch it.
@rozchristopherson648
@rozchristopherson648 3 жыл бұрын
@@zeffery101 I’m glad to hear it. When you are in your 40s, you’ll be happy you prepared for your 40s. Along the way to your 60s, begin to think about your retirement years and what you want to be doing then so you can prepare and have an enjoyable, full life during those years also. But make sure to enjoy and appreciate your youth as well. There’s a lot of time spent being old, but you’re only young for a short time. Blessings. 🙏
@rozchristopherson648
@rozchristopherson648 3 жыл бұрын
@@Merknilash Haves and have nots is not just about communism versus capitalism. A bad life is a bad life, regardless of where one lives. But there is always hope to change one’s life for the better. Changing one’s life starts from within the human spirit and heart.
@earthangel1978
@earthangel1978 3 жыл бұрын
No one talks about Maslows Heiarchy of needs and I think that’s so important with this topic. What level you are on defines your behavior in a profound way, it determines how you work and how you live as well as your happiness level.
@mitdragnurb
@mitdragnurb Күн бұрын
I have been waiting over 30 years to see this happen. I am glad people have accepted that there is more to life than a job.
@GretaZ-dd3lu
@GretaZ-dd3lu 3 жыл бұрын
I left my job at Apple this past Friday. It was a decision informed by desperation and fear of dying of exhaustion. I'm 43 and totally burnt out. I just want to spend time with family and enjoy my home. But I need to find another job if I want to pay my bills. I hate this cycle. I'm a feminist and I feel like not being hardcore about work and achievement makes me a failure as a modern woman, especially since I'm not a mother. This video was incredibly reassuring and needed. THANK YOU.
@mahoganydrive
@mahoganydrive 3 жыл бұрын
I used to feel like a loser for not having big career aspirations but thankfully I was able to get over that. My job is not my passion and it’s nothing fancy but my bills are paid, the hours and benefits are good and I’m not expected to work overtime. It’s enough for me.
@MsChurromaiz
@MsChurromaiz 3 жыл бұрын
It's great to hear you prioritizing your health. I used to work as a lab manager and it was super stressful, but nothing prepared me for getting hit by a car as a pedestrian... Let me tell you, it took 8 years of rehab to be able to walk, talk and find some meaning in my life again. I learned so much from almost dying, having all my abilities being taken away to realize my life is worth more. Try to find the type of work that gives you fulfillment as well as money, cause life is too short and can be taken away in an instant. Trust me it can be done. You are a wonderful human who can do anything!
@aprilwright3900
@aprilwright3900 3 жыл бұрын
That’s not feminism that makes you feel like a loser for not being hardcore about work. That’s capitalism telling you your use-value as a human being is be productive and competitive for rich people’s benefit. Take some time to degprogram. Good luck on your next phase!
@mrs0rochester
@mrs0rochester 3 жыл бұрын
I think one of the aspects of feminism is having the choice to do what's right for you. You don't have to have a high profile career and conquer the corporate world if you don't feel called to do so. Your achievements can include enjoying your home life with your family.
@lotuswolf1518
@lotuswolf1518 3 жыл бұрын
It's ok if you become a stay at home mom or wife or stay home and njoy your passions like music cooking art or travelling, life isn't all about working for someone else and getting paid and making money
@fatalkookie
@fatalkookie 3 жыл бұрын
It is very nice to ask yourself a question: "When I lay dying somewhere - will I remember the countless hours of stacking up boxes or filling forms?" Maybe I will just remember that one time when I was soaking wet and eating a burger - after losing my shoes somewhere and having a laugh? We are just some older kids. Don't let the kid die in you.
@FruityUnicorn17
@FruityUnicorn17 3 жыл бұрын
Omg I LOVE that. It’s sad that we are forced to suppress our inner child.
@karenhardie1132
@karenhardie1132 3 жыл бұрын
I heard once, there are no saddle bags on a coffin. When you are at the end no one cares about your job. Family is what matters.
@Furyswipes
@Furyswipes 3 жыл бұрын
Take vacations. Enjoy life. The memories you make will fill your thoughts and you will have no regrets, despite working hard at a soulless job.
@Keepmovingson
@Keepmovingson 3 жыл бұрын
No, but i’ll remember making my parents proud, providing for my family, having money to pursue my dreams, feeling fulfilled for being strong enough to do something that I find difficult, for the hobbies it allows me to follow, for the growth in character and the lessons it teaches me, for the people I meet...
@Keepmovingson
@Keepmovingson 3 жыл бұрын
Why not be a doctor? Why not use your career to help people? Why does it have to be filling forms and stacking boxes. It doesn’t have to be. That’s just a bottlenecked stereotype of “work”. The lady’s first mistake was doing business when she clearly likes art and preaching her philosophy (which I encourage because I like the discussion).
@GoonAdventure
@GoonAdventure Жыл бұрын
THANK YOU for this message :)
I quiet quit my job.
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