I graduated from a good school in Mechanical Engineering, had dreams of being an engineer designing infrastructure or solar systems or whatever. I ended up never getting an actual engineering job, I never got the opportunity to start a career as an engineer or scientist. I hopped from job to job in related fields, as a construction technician or literally working for small engineering companies for free just to gain experience (never gaining any tangible skills in the process. I simply never got a junior position anywhere, in anything. I never really had a specific field I was interested in, in which I desired to hone my skills, because, well, I never got an in, I never got the first decent paying job that taught me the skills of the trade. I still feel to this day that success in Engineering not related to CS, like most professions, is entirely dependent on networking and who you know. If I had just gotten that first, if I had networked a bit harder, if I had a non immigrant family that knew some people, I might have gotten a prestigious job doing something of worth.

I just moved to Texas from the place I grew up in (because that place has been abandoned by any friends I ever had and there is no future there for me), trying to find a job after I got fired from the previous tangentially related engineering job I held. I turned 30 today and I have, like, 1 friend here.

I’ve let go of any hope of having a profession in which I did something that mattered to people or gaining useful skills in society. My grades aren’t good enough to get into grad school, and I just want to have a house and friends and do nothing all day.

I’ve been broke for way too long and I might have just gotten the opportunity to earn a shit ton of money by becoming a salesman of solar panels. How…anti-praxis is that? Is this entirely giving up on everything I stand for and becoming a literal capitalist?

  • Sphere [he/him, they/them]
    ·
    1 year ago

    Do what you love, and the 9-5 grind will kill any passion you ever had for it.

    So much this, and not least because employers at jobs that people "love" tend to assume that they can get away with paying people substantially less than they're worth.