I wanted to be a programmer a few years ago but I just couldn’t put my head around it. Considering AI is becoming a thing I made the right call there.

  • PTSDwarrior@lemmy.ml
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    6 hours ago

    Not so much a dream career but a dream escape out of nursing, but not completely out of nursing since that would mean starting over with a new degree, new shit to pay for, more debt. I got into informatics, hoping to capitalize on my nursing experience combined with my desire to make EMR software usable for the users. I didn’t go anywhere with that degree. I didn’t get a job as an informaticist. Now I’m stuck in a nursing job I hate and it is making me suicidal, and my BF is getting worn out because of my flare-up of CPTSD symptoms. He also suffers from anxiety so he feels a lot of what I feel. I am very intent on finding an apprenticeship program for a trade I think I’d be decent at: Communications or low voltage systems. I came back from an apprenticeship graduation event, part of the perks of being with my BF who works very closely with the unions who run them. I hope I can make a good career in this field.

    Nursing is not a good choice for all of you if you are sick of your dead end jobs or dead end careers. Nursing is full of psychopathic beeaches. If you’ve ever gotten any bad vibes from many nurses, this is why. I am getting out by hook or by crook. Yeah sure, it may destroy my chances of emigrating to a western country in the short term, but long term, I think I’d be better off. And I could still parlay any new trade skills into permanent residency in another western country. However, I also got my nursing license in British Columbia. I’m still torn.

    • I'm_All_NEET:3@lemmy.mlOP
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      5 hours ago

      Funny you say that. From earlier in this thread,

      “Back when I was 18 I wanted nothing more then to be a nurse.”

      "They also did a psychological evaluation on me and it turns out I was a “deviant sociopath” "

      • PTSDwarrior@lemmy.ml
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        5 hours ago

        If you are a woman and a psychopath, you’ll blend in better. Men, they might not be able to hide as well.

  • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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    24 hours ago

    I wanted to be a pilot since I was a child. I got an introductory ride in a Cessna on my 14th birthday. Started taking flying lessons in earnest around 16, earned a private pilot’s license my freshman year of college. Decided I wanted to go into it as a job, started working on my instrument rating, and for my junior year of college I transferred to ERAU in Daytona Beach. Lasted just over a semester there. Ended up earning a light sport flight instructor certificate and I taught classes at a small school, eventually earning an LSRM certificate and working as the company mechanic as well. I’m a walking flight school, just add airplane.

    Wasn’t earning enough money to pay all my own bills, and though I was logging 20-30 hours a week of flight time little of it was applicable to further ratings, and then the owners of the school started doing some sketchy shit and I decided to dip out. In the summer of 2012 I landed after a lesson with a student, and I haven’t flown an airplane since.

    I kinda built myself a job as the project manager of a little job shop/prototyping firm, then that business didn’t survive COVID. I’m a woodworker now.

  • thezeesystem@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 day ago

    Yep many decades ago because capatilism society dictates I must be hyper productive and do stupid shit in order to do it while I have disabilities that limit me. Wanted to make a business or side gig I guess repairing computers but doing that requires me to have loads of money in the first place. Kinda just gave up on all my dreams after attempting college and failing because it’s not designed for my disabilities.

  • Moonguide@lemmy.ml
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    1 day ago

    Illustration. It isn’t a thing where I’m at, and settled for graphic design (which is still barely a thing here). After graduation I applied for scholarships abroad, and got accepted on a full ride in a private university in Hamburg for illustration.

    Weeks before I was supposed to leave I got cold feet and looked up all the info I could about the university. Turns out it’s a scam, the degree’s worth fuck all, and the university seemed to have this MO of recruiting aspiring legal migrants from third world countries (like myself) into its curriculum, voiding their scholarship, offering shit education, and charging exorbitant rates until they leave or graduate.

    I was despondent for months since this seemed to be my big break after a pretty tough few months. Then AI image generation took off.

    I’m okay at illustrating characters, but it’s immediately obvious I’ve learnt by myself and have done very little diligent study on the topic. My inexperience, how prevalent AI images are, and the uphill battle that gaining clients is, are keeping me away from trying again.

  • rmuk@feddit.uk
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    2 days ago

    Yup! I had an amazing job lined up working for a major company at their EMEA headquarters in the UK. I had got through a half-dozen rounds of interviews and was offered the position. I had just moved into a place near their campus and was heading through the process of joining (there was a longwinded - but fully paid - enrolment process I was working through) with an amazing job full of travel, interesting challenges and, crucially, a £100k/year salary waiting at the end. But this was shortly after Brexit and the flailing UK government was jumping from self-imposed crisis to completely-unavoidable crisis, insulting and infuriating other countries by constantly changing the terms of neotiation, publicly announcing then denying new impossible promises by the day, and the company in questions had just had enough: how the fuck could they keep their EMEA HQ in a country that couldn’t even promise that foreigners would be able to visit - let alone work - there in six months, and they announced the campus was closing. All the existing jobs moved to the EU, existing staff offered redundancy or relocation, and the onboarding process was cancelled. Thanks to Brexit I wasn’t allowed to live or work in the EU so I was jobless. I ended up doing shitting IT support jobs for £20k then £18k for years until I finally landed the job I’m in now which I love, but it’s definately not where I could - or, at the risk of sounding arrogant should - have been.

  • PM_ME_VINTAGE_30S [he/him]@lemmy.sdf.org
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    2 days ago

    Music production. It would have taken years after finishing recording school to even begin to break even, let alone make minimum wage, let alone make a living wage. All the entry-level gigs were one-time unpaid things.

    I haven’t fully given up on music production forever because I’m too fucking stubborn, but I’m not making it my full-time job.

    • FellowEnt@sh.itjust.works
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      1 day ago

      I know a few producers, the only one who is full time doesn’t really need the money. The rest mostly do muaic tuition or similar, seems like a good match if you know an instrument(s).

  • SilliusMaximus@mander.xyz
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    2 days ago

    Well no. I’ve changed my mind a lot of times about what I want to do not because of industry but simply because my taste changed. I believe it’s important to do what you love, personally I don’t care if I don’t make lots of money.

  • agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works
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    2 days ago

    I wanted to be a mechanical engineer growing up, I was always playing with Lego and building little mechanisms. Then I had a physics teacher who got into the subject of physics vs engineering. He told the class about his brother who was an engineer for some electric motor company, and how his team would spend 18 months fiddling with the parameters of a motor, and they’d throw a party if they increased efficiency by 0.5%. I couldn’t disagree with his assessment that that sounded boring and soul-draining.

    It sounds like the perfect job for a certain kind of person, and I am not that kind of person.

  • Darren@sopuli.xyz
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    2 days ago

    Radio production.

    Got a degree, moved to London, applied for loads of jobs, and… nothing.

    Trouble is, I needed to be paid, and at the entry level it’s all unpaid internships and volunteering at community stations. Unless you know someone who can get you through the door, of course.

    Stuck with making a podcast in my spare time for a few years, but ultimately lost the spark.

    These days I work in health and safety management and stream a radio show every Monday night that about 15 people tune into live, and 30-odd people listen to on Mixcloud. It makes me no money, but I enjoy it.

  • edupo@europe.pub
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    2 days ago

    All careers suck as they are designed to make you enter the rats race. Owning a business included…

    Myself I started 3 or 4 times a careers and the only time I enjoyed my work it was due to the people around me.

    Do whatever and try to find its positives…

    I work IT and I would say: Don’t worry too much about AI. Lot of hype from boomers but is mostly bullshit.

  • lightnsfw@reddthat.com
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    2 days ago

    Growing up I wanted to be a mechanic. After I went to tech school and got into the field I learned how much of it was pushing shit on people even when it can wait or they can’t afford it. I got bitched at by my boss for trying to help someone prioritize what they actually needed vs “recommended services” on more than one occasion. I tried switching shops a few times but it was always the same thing so I completely lost my passion for it. I just work on my own car now.

  • Weirdfish@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Multiple times in my career the thing I had trained for basically stopped being a thing, or became such an easy thing it wasn’t going to be much of a job.

    Being at the wrong point, either too early or too late, in various tech waves almost felt like my super power.

    Wasn’t until I turned thirty that I picked the right tech at the right time, and for 20 years have had a great career in an industry that is just as valuable today as when I started.

    Programming turned out to be a major component in what I do, and while I’ve seen AI spit out some reasonable code in the more popular languages, I can’t see it replacing what I’m doing before I’m too old to care.

    • Darren@sopuli.xyz
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      2 days ago

      I was studying for a radio production degree exactly at the point where radio station budgets were rapidly shrinking, while podcasting was growing. But obviously the degree course didn’t really have any podcasting in the syllabus because it was relatively new. Home streaming wasn’t really a thing at that point either, so we go no tuition on how to set up our own output.

      Radio is massively different now than it was then. So yeah, I hear ya.