JLTraveling
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 3, 2005
- Messages
- 2,709
I'm firmly in the "if it's not for you move on" camp. I was taught in college that the average American has seven different careers. I'm 34. I worked my way through college at WDW and Universal. I majored in psychology and theatre. I worked in a couple of residential mental health facilities. I was working on my master's when the bottom kind of dropped out of my life, and I dropped out of grad school. I ran a remodeling/historic renovation company for a couple of years. I finally stumbled into freelance writing, and I'm now four years into a surprisingly successful and rewarding career with several regular major clients.
That seems to be the norm these days, at least among my circle of friends and acquaintances. "Stick it out" worked in the old days, but today lateral moves and complete career remakes seem more realistic. If you want to do something else, do it. The best advice I ever got? "Do what you love and the money will follow." It really does work.
That seems to be the norm these days, at least among my circle of friends and acquaintances. "Stick it out" worked in the old days, but today lateral moves and complete career remakes seem more realistic. If you want to do something else, do it. The best advice I ever got? "Do what you love and the money will follow." It really does work.