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Thinking of quitting my job...


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2014 Jul 15, 1:53am   38,699 views  112 comments

by joshuatrio   ➕follow (4)   💰tip   ignore  

Looking for a little perspective, mostly because I think I'm borderline crazy for considering leaving my job - in this economy.

I'm married, with kids, make just over six figures, zero debt, and a savings account that could conservatively float us about 9-10 years. I also have a small, web based business which earns a few k per month and it almost meets our living expenses as is.

Here's what I want to do: quit my job, build my online business, and spend a lot of time traveling the western US and Mexico.

I feel like I'm crazy for being willing to drop a great job - but at this point, I find no satisfaction in what I do, and I think it would be more rewarding to build my own business and spend more time traveling with the family... rather than in a cubicle.

Almost pulled the trigger on this a few years ago, but chickened out. However I'm in a much better position financially to do so.

Anyhow... opinions..?

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40   dublin hillz   2014 Jul 15, 5:30am  

Watch the movie Cypher.....

41   anonymous   2014 Jul 15, 5:32am  

edvard2 says

Peter P says

Or, it may just take a leap of faith.

Is life about stability? Or is it about growth?

Basically its about whether you want to end up old and eating cat food or end up being old and able to enjoy the last 20-30 years of your life as you want.

What kind of idiot would sacrifice all the good years of their life, when they are able to fully enjoy all that this life has to offer, for working all those years away on the hope that you will be able to enjoy your time as a senior citizen, laughing at those eating cat food. Fuck that shit, twice. Call me old school, but to me, retirement means death, and I fully intend to use up all the good years prior to the slow decline of seniority, doing everything but working some meaningless and unfulfilling job. I just turned 33 and I've already figured out how to thrive on a 28 hour work week, that leaves me from thurs 5pm -Monday @ noon to live and not worry about working. No amount of money or faux securitry (benefits lol) woulde get me to trade away my time

42   joshuatrio   2014 Jul 15, 5:36am  

errc says

What kind of idiot would sacrifice all the good years of their life, when they are able to fully enjoy all that this life has to offer, for working all those years away on the hope that you will be able to enjoy your time as a senior citizen, laughing at those eating cat food. Fuck that shit, twice. Call me old school, but to me, retirement means death, and I fully intend to use up all the good years prior to the slow decline of seniority, doing everything but working some meaningless and unfulfilling job. I just turned 33 and I've already figured out how to thrive on a 28 hour work week, that leaves me from thurs 5pm -Monday @ noon to live and not worry about working. No amount of money or faux securitry (benefits lol) woulde get me to trade away my time

Pretty much sums it up.

43   joshuatrio   2014 Jul 15, 5:37am  

CaptainShuddup says

After that, I decided I will never work for a company again. I made the leap of faith to develop some technology I had been working on.

Congratulations. I'm glad that it worked out for you. You are probably doing better for yourself than for the man... yes?

44   edvard2   2014 Jul 15, 5:56am  

errc says

What kind of idiot would sacrifice all the good years of their life, when they are able to fully enjoy all that this life has to offer, for working all those years away on the hope that you will be able to enjoy your time as a senior citizen, laughing at those eating cat food. Fuck that shit, twice. Call me old school, but to me, retirement means death,

Too bad I'm already having the time of my life. At the rate that I am earning I can retire in less than 10 years too. But either way, some of you guys who have the attitude like the one mentioned in quotes above had better save your money because when I retire you ain't gettin' jack shit from me nor will I pay for your cat food bills either.

45   Peter P   2014 Jul 15, 5:57am  

edvard2 says

Peter P says

Or, it may just take a leap of faith.

Is life about stability? Or is it about growth?

Basically its about whether you want to end up old and eating cat food or end up being old and able to enjoy the last 20-30 years of your life as you want.

How can you possibly plan so far ahead without making too many assumptions about the future?

One ought to follow his passion and grow his character. If you don't dread retirement when you're old you will have failed.

46   Peter P   2014 Jul 15, 6:00am  

Heraclitusstudent says

joshuatrio says

Working for a corporation - you're just making someone else richer.

That's an interesting moto, though I'm fairly sure most millionaires are corporate rats working for large corporations. They just aren't the billionaires.

Rich millionaire is such an oxymoron.

47   Peter P   2014 Jul 15, 6:03am  

Why do people do things they hate, day in and day out, just so that they can stop "one day?"

48   New Renter   2014 Jul 15, 6:09am  

errc says

Call me old school, but to me, retirement means death

Most retired people I know find themselves busier in retirement than when they worked. Keeping busy is not a problem.
Peter P says

I am not sure gaps in the resume is as harmful as before.

It is.

I spoke with a couple of headhunters within the past few weeks. I was told in no uncertain terms that a gap is a black mark, even more so now because employers can afford to be very picky.

Cases in point: The wife of a buddy of mine was let go from a major telecom provider back in October. Bachelors in Communications and worked her way up to some sort of director level position. Because of her years of faithful service she was given a generous severance package. She immediately started looking for a new job, about 20 hrs a week.

She's still looking. She gets interviews but that's it, no offers.

Yesterday I had lunch with a couple of former co-workers of mine. Both have part time jobs. One is tech, the other is HR. HR confided her view that it its still a very tight job market.

The economy my be picking up but there is still a labor surplus.

edvard2 says

Lastly, I am not sure what you do for a living, but if its in tech, well tech moves so fast that a year spent away from it can mean a return to a job market where your skills are obsolete.

6+ months is considered obsolete.

49   edvard2   2014 Jul 15, 6:11am  

Peter P says

How can you possibly plan so far ahead without making too many assumptions about the future?

One ought to follow his passion and grow his character. If you don't dread retirement when you're old you will have failed.

Because there are set assumptions that anyone who plans to retire someday to have. In order to live from age 60-100 you'll need at least 1 million dollars worth of retirement in order to survive off of 40k a year. In other words- 1 million bucks to live barely above working class. So figure 2 million bucks minimum.

Either way, this site and others sometimes shocks me in how little people seem to really care, know, or comprehend what retirement is all about as well as its importance. being old and poor is NOT a good thing.

50   Y   2014 Jul 15, 6:11am  

ditto..

Strategist says

Having said that, I will still NEVER EVER work for a boss. :)

51   Y   2014 Jul 15, 6:15am  

I'm freaked out by your avatar....
I swear to god i didn't take your potato chips!

turtledove says

it won't have the appearance of some kind of breakdown.

52   Peter P   2014 Jul 15, 6:15am  

New Renter says

I spoke with a couple of headhunters within the past few weeks. I was told in no uncertain terms that a gap is a black mark, even more so now because employers can afford to be very picky.

Of course! Such gaps are preferably filled immediately with their help. ;-)

It's like asking an auto repair shop whether you should continue driving a lemon.

New Renter says

6+ months is considered obsolete.

A good company hires the person, not the skills. In the tech world, the "right" mixture of skills is never available, whereas the right person can pick up any skill in days.

53   Peter P   2014 Jul 15, 6:17am  

edvard2 says

In order to live from age 60-100 you'll need at least 1 million dollars worth of retirement in order to survive off of 40k a year.

If you need to count you don't have enough to retire.

54   New Renter   2014 Jul 15, 6:25am  

Peter P says

New Renter says

I spoke with a couple of headhunters within the past few weeks. I was told in no uncertain terms that a gap is a black mark, even more so now because employers can afford to be very picky.

Of course! Such gaps are preferably filled immediately with their help. ;-)

That's not what was meant.

Their paying clients are the companies who immediately toss any resume with a gap. The only help they will provide is how to creatively fill that gap.

I suspect most people being hired today are being very creative in this regard.

Peter P says

New Renter says

6+ months is considered obsolete.

A good company hires the person, not the skills. In the tech world, the "right" mixture of skills is never available, whereas the right person can pick up any skill in days.

That may have been true in years past but not now. As I said companies are swamped with applicants. They use the gap as a filter - only applicants without significant gaps will be called to see if they are "right".

55   anonymous   2014 Jul 15, 6:29am  

errc says

Call me old school, but to me, retirement means death

New Renter said "Most retired people I know find themselves busier in retirement than when they wor Keeping busy is not a problem."

--------------------

I didn't say that keeping busy, is a problem. I can dream up infinite better things to do with my time, rather than trade it for dollars

What I meant, was that the word 'retire', by definition, meant to die. I wager to an edvard type, retirement means - 'work your entire life away, so that you'll have enough markers on past labor, to force others to take care of you while you grind out death, in a body that's past its expiration date.' And hey, the edvard type will have paid north of half a million $ to private "health" "insurers", so he will have the comfort of knowing that. And hopefully, easy access to lots of drugs.

It all sounds like death to me. If your trading all your quality years, for what someone else has told you, is the safe and surefire path to a senior citizen life, the next step above the catfood eaters. Well then, you're as good as dead already

56   joshuatrio   2014 Jul 15, 6:33am  

edvard2 says

Either way, this site and others sometimes shocks me in how little people seem to really care, know, or comprehend what retirement is all about as well as its importance. being old and poor is NOT a good thing.

I'm not ignorant to retirement. I save 50% of my take home, a 401k account, precious metals, and a comfortable savings account. My vehicles are paid off and no loans of any sort. My plan is not to piss away all that I have in pursuit of a dream, but to take a chance, to do something I enjoy - that I am already making a few k per month with minimal effort.

The risk appears on the low side honestly. Figure if it fails, and I have to go back to the hamster wheel - even with a large paycut, I'm good.

New Renter says

edvard2 says

Lastly, I am not sure what you do for a living, but if its in tech, well tech moves so fast that a year spent away from it can mean a return to a job market where your skills are obsolete.

6+ months is considered obsolete.

Disagree. Although I'm not a programmer.

57   Peter P   2014 Jul 15, 6:37am  

New Renter says

Their paying clients are the companies who immediately toss any resume with a gap. The only help they will provide is how to creatively fill that gap.

You don't want to work for those companies anyway...

The only useful quantitative measure on a resume is the number of pages. Anything more than two is highly suspicious. ANY kind of life accomplishments can be described in one page or less.

Qualitatively, how a person chooses to present himself/herself is more telling than what is being presented.

That said, the best hires tend to be referrals by other good hires.

58   edvard2   2014 Jul 15, 6:39am  

Peter P says

If you need to count you don't have enough to retire.

Counting what you need is better than having no plan at all...errc says

What I meant, was that the word 'retire', by definition, meant to die. I wager to an edvard type, retirement means - 'work your entire life away, so that you'll have enough markers on past labor, to force others to take care of you while you grind out death, in a body that's past its expiration date.' And hey, the edvard type will have paid north of half a million $ to private "health" "insurers", so he will have the comfort of knowing that. And hopefully, easy access to lots of drugs.

It all sounds like death to me. If your trading all your quality years, for what someone else has told you, is the safe and surefire path to a senior citizen life, the next step above the catfood eaters. Well then, you're as good as dead already

You must have a very strange opinion of what retirement must be like. I volunteer on weekends at a local museum and 90% of the guys there are in their 70's and 80's. One of them just got back from a 1 month trip from France. Another took a trip to Rio about 6 months ago. The same guy who went to France built another house in Portland OR. One of the guys has a vintage VW bus and he and his Wife are taking off on a 10,000 mile round trip tour of the West. Both are around 80.

These guys have been retired for decades. Yet they are busier than me. They are more active than most people half their age. But you want to know why they can do and have been dong what they do for years and years? They were smart with their money. They saved. They retired by the time their were in their 60's. What's more most of them LOVED their jobs. Ironically the club I am in concerns preserving the industry they all retired from.

But everyone can do what they want to do. I meant what I said too: Those who do not save won't be getting one penny from me if they wind up totally broke and destitute when they get to be near or at retirement age. If some want to play, go for it. But don't expect any sympathy for those who were responsible and saved.

59   Strategist   2014 Jul 15, 6:40am  

Call it Crazy says

Strategist says

Are you guys kidding? I have been my own boss for 25 years. You get no benefits....no paid vacation.....you pay double the payroll tax....no sick leave....and you don't work 9 -5 because you are on call 24/7.

The other side is always greener.

Having said that, I will still NEVER EVER work for a boss. :)

Ahhh, but remember, your wife gives you an allowance!!!

Oh God...how can I forget. Taco Bell for lunch again.
My dog eats better. :(

60   Peter P   2014 Jul 15, 6:41am  

joshuatrio says

I'm not ignorant to retirement. I save 50% of my take home, a 401k account, precious metals, and a comfortable savings account. My vehicles are paid off and no loans of any sort. My plan is not to piss away all that I have in pursuit of a dream, but to take a chance, to do something I enjoy - that I am already making a few k per month with minimal effort.

The real risk is that you share this world with other retirements with little assets. I wonder what that political landscape will be when you hit 65.

IMO it is better to really live and thrive. Or fail. It does not matter.

Life is a tragedy. There is no way around it. The question is, are you enjoying the show?

61   joshuatrio   2014 Jul 15, 6:42am  

errc says

I didn't say that keeping busy, is a problem. I can dream up infinite better things to do with my time, rather than trade it for dollars

Ditto.

errc says

If your trading all your quality years, for what someone else has told you, is the safe and surefire path to a senior citizen life, the next step above the catfood eaters. Well then, you're as good as dead already

Great point.

Another thing that concerns me about office life is that in most office environments, people look miserable, bored, tired. Common comments are "I have x years till retirement." It bothers me how many people count down that "retirement clock" - it's as if they have nothing worth living for.

62   New Renter   2014 Jul 15, 6:42am  

joshuatrio says

New Renter says

edvard2 says

Lastly, I am not sure what you do for a living, but if its in tech, well tech moves so fast that a year spent away from it can mean a return to a job market where your skills are obsolete.

6+ months is considered obsolete.

Disagree. Although I'm not a programmer.

Neither am I but I am in tech.

YMMV of course

63   edvard2   2014 Jul 15, 6:42am  

joshuatrio says

I save 50% of my take home, a 401k account, precious metals, and a comfortable savings account. My vehicles are paid off and no loans of any sort. My plan is not to piss away all that I have in pursuit of a dream, but to take a chance, to do something I enjoy - that I am already making a few k per month with minimal effort.

Its all up to you. We too saved a lot of our incomes. We rented with other housemates for a decade. Then we bought a house and still save a lot of our income. As others have said and as I discovered, when you're unemployed you would be amazed how much money you'll spend that you never thought of when employed. That's totally what I experienced. Prior to being laid off I never thought about gas, food, and basics like that. When you're laid off suddenly its like- holy shit! Gas is $4 a gallon! Keep in mind that I as mentioned- live very frugally. I was also on unemployment. I still wound up using up around $6,000 in savings for the 4 months I was out of work and all I did was stick around the house looking for another job.

I guess I'm being the super cautious one here. The experiences I've had gave me a different perspective about having a job period.

64   New Renter   2014 Jul 15, 6:46am  

Peter P says

New Renter says

Their paying clients are the companies who immediately toss any resume with a gap. The only help they will provide is how to creatively fill that gap.

You don't want to work for those companies anyway...

Those companies are everywhere, or at least they share an HR doctrine.

joshuatrio says

It bothers me how many people count down that "retirement clock" - it's as if they have nothing worth living for.

The stockroom guy at my university had one of those in his office. If you stopped him in the hallway and asked he could tell you off the top of his head how long to the hour until his day would come.

65   Peter P   2014 Jul 15, 6:51am  

The math behind software has not changed much for decades. I am sure computer scientists in the 70's would understand things like Ruby on Rails right away. They did not use them simply because of other technological constraints (like CPU/IO/network speed and disk space).

A genuine intellectual curiosity is infinitely more valuable than "being current."

There are just too many junk programmers out there. Hiring them is like asking a house-painter to do a mural.

66   Peter P   2014 Jul 15, 6:54am  

New Renter says

Those companies are everywhere, or at least they share an HR doctrine.

Perhaps it is prudent not to work for a company large enough to have an HR department.

67   edvard2   2014 Jul 15, 6:57am  

Peter P says

The math behind software has not changed much for decades. I am sure computer scientists in the 70's would understand things like Ruby on Rails right away. They did not use them simply because of other technological constraints (like CPU/IO/network speed and disk space).

A genuine intellectual curiosity is infinitely more valuable than "being current."

There are just too many junk programmers out there. Hiring them is like asking a house-painter to do a mural.

That's meaningless. Sure- anyone who is decent at code should "theoretically" understand programming language from a rudimentary level. But that's not what companies want. They don't want someone who is unfamiliar with the latest OS, standards, UI, and other intricacies of a given program and then give them time to "catch up". No. You should be expected to be totally able to walk in and start working immediately.

I'm not even a programmer. I'm a designer and the same is true with what I do. Sure- someone who learned Photoshop back in the 90's when it came out will know the basics of that program and what exists today will bear some similarities. But what is demanded of today's designers not only in knowing the latest versions of the slew of programs they need to use but the ever-changing design trends which are needed. 4 years ago Desktop was still king. Today you had better know how to design for responsive desktops and mobile. The change is rapid. If you leave for even a year you had better get your crap together and learn what you've missed because what I knew last year is now totally useless for today's requirements.

68   Peter P   2014 Jul 15, 7:04am  

edvard2 says

But that's not what companies want. They don't want someone who is unfamiliar with the latest OS, standards, UI, and other intricacies of a given program and then give them time to "catch up".

That is not my experience in multiple companies.

I once even got a job offer to program in a language with which I had ZERO experience.

69   Peter P   2014 Jul 15, 7:06am  

komputodo says

As far as personal "growth" goes, I don't even know what that word means. Just one of those mainstream filler words that's used when you don't know what to say.

There are many aspects of growth...

Here is my favorite...

I find out I know LESS every day.

70   New Renter   2014 Jul 15, 7:07am  

edvard2 says

You should be expected to be totally able to walk in and start working immediately.

Again this is a reflection of the particulars of the specific labor market. If labor is tight employers will be lenient on the job requirements and allow the employee to catch up. If the market is swimming with applicants employers can be very choosy and select only employees who have a 110% fit to the job to be done.

71   New Renter   2014 Jul 15, 7:16am  

edvard2 says

But everyone can do what they want to do. I meant what I said too: Those who do not save won't be getting one penny from me if they wind up totally broke and destitute when they get to be near or at retirement age. If some want to play, go for it. But don't expect any sympathy for those who were responsible and saved.

Of those people how many are living on pensions no longer available to current employees? How about the benefit of incredibly low housing purchase prices with 3 decades of dropping interest rates to follow? There is also the incredible stock market performance today's retirees had the benefit of.

72   Peter P   2014 Jul 15, 7:19am  

komputodo says

They feel they need to trade their quality years for money because in the US, old people without money have no redeeming value.

So you should try to get rich while you are still young.

And no, if you have to fly commercial you are not rich.

You have a better chance making it doing what you love.

73   Peter P   2014 Jul 15, 7:22am  

komputodo says

And lastly, they need that extra mil for the private room at the hospital where they are going to live out their last 6 months trying the latest, most expensive experimental drugs money can buy.

I think it is better to "buy" an afterlife at that stage. ;-)

74   edvard2   2014 Jul 15, 7:24am  

komputodo says

To make a long story short probably less than .01% of the population has the stones to walk away from their "imagined security" and be their own master.

As far as personal "growth" goes, I don't even know what that word means. Just one of those mainstream filler words that's used when you don't know what to say.

Then again, I know hordes of people who "had the stones" to walk off the job, go out and either start some dreamy business or run off to the desert to play the flute or whatever. Most of them are poor and miserable as a result. So if the comment was about people having the balls to quit and do whatever I can't say I'm totally in awe or jealous.Peter P says

That is not my experience in multiple companies.

All I can tell you is that as far as today's market you had better know your shit and not expect to have the leisure to have to learn whatever it is you need to do for that job. That has totally been my experience.

Anyway.... Here are my closing thoughts on this. Perhaps many of you graduated from college, got jobs and things were all happy days. When I graduated the economy was in the shitter. The only jobs were basically jobs at big box stores and so on. So that's what I did. I made $8 an hour. Try and live in the most expensive metro in the US off that. I did. But anyway, that sucked. Worrying about money sucks because at the time every month was a struggle.

When I finally made it out of that situation and started doing better I can guarantee that I appreciated the money a whole hell of a lot more than those kids who found good jobs right out of school. So I'll be honest: When I hear of people just wanting to hop skip and jump out of some cushy job my immediate and perhaps unfair opinion is there's a lot of spoiled-rotten folks who might not know what its like to make minimum wage for a living and to have to dig under the cushions for laundry change.

The thing is that right now the economy is basically in yet another bubble: times are great and everything if all hunky-dory. But that can and will likely all change. I've been through 3 recessions so far and they all sucked. I see that the OP says he's 24. In other words too young to have really experienced that. In 2008 that would make him what?- like 18? But anyway, anyone who has been around long enough should really count inevitable recessions as part of the future. Maybe times are great now but what are ya' gonna' do when the next recession hits? You see, its not just retirement that needs to be saved for but these recessions which ultimately translates to a few years of lean times between the boom times.

I suppose I've spouted off enough about this. People are free to what they want to do. maybe we should all just quit our jobs and run off to the desert and learn to play the flute...

75   Peter P   2014 Jul 15, 7:27am  

Oh, I have seen layoffs in my office. It happened soon after I joined. The second day, I told my boss that the layoff was overrated because the parking lot was still too full.

76   Peter P   2014 Jul 15, 7:29am  

komputodo says

For all the people that took the safe secure route in life with a steady job and pension.

If they made a movie of your life, would anybody watch it?

I love The Office.

77   New Renter   2014 Jul 15, 7:36am  

edvard2 says

I see that the OP says he's 24.

He is? And he's making a 6 figure income?

Why would you want to leave that?

78   Peter P   2014 Jul 15, 7:39am  

New Renter says

edvard2 says

I see that the OP says he's 24.

He is? And he's making a 6 figure income?

Why would you want to leave that?

Because one can never get rich on a 6, 7 or even 8-figure income?

Perhaps his dream is even bigger than having lots of money?

The greatest tragedy in life is aiming too low.

79   edvard2   2014 Jul 15, 7:46am  

komputodo says

For all the people that took the safe secure route in life with a steady job and pension.

If they made a movie of your life, would anybody watch it?

Hell yeah! I guess that must mean that my life is really exciting, not to mention safe and secure.

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