Comment by justonceokay

Comment by justonceokay 16 hours ago

4 replies

I became a massage therapist by going to school and doing the thing. It took me realistically two years of taking factory work and bartending to (a) figure out where I wanted to fit in the world and (b) to stop identifying as a tech dropout.

For me my greatest motivation was that I wanted to work with people individually, money be damned. I had a supportive spouse and we already lived frugally so I could build a business without (overwhelming) fear of failure.

If you can still stomach office work become an accountant. You’ll use all your analytic skills in a role that is useful to every sized company but your pace of work will be much more constant. Your ability to write small programs and debug excel will make you valuable.

stevenhubertron 16 hours ago

My small sample size has always said accountant's work CRAZY hours for much less pay. Clearly you have a different sample. What are you hearing?

  • justonceokay 16 hours ago

    I live near some accountants for the city government, so maybe my viewpoint is skewed by the pace of public work. Then again, a lot of jobs can have long hours and most jobs have lower pay than tech.

  • blindriver 15 hours ago

    Early years in Big4 as an auditor yes. As you climb the ladder it gets better and you make good money. Once you become partner you can earn high six figures or more in big cities and the pensions are extremely generous.

    You can go to industry and climb the ladder and make good money with less crazy workload.

    I know a chief accounting officer at a public company and she earns 7 figures. She works a lot but also goes on vacations and has free time.

  • pc86 15 hours ago

    There's "doing accounting work for clients as part of a contract" which is not that dissimilar to being an independent contractor on the software side except for 1/3 the pay or less. The work is "easier" but less intellectually stimulating as you're doing the same thing over and over again with different numbers.

    Then there's "doing accounting work for a company as part of an accounting department" which is much more likely to be 40h weeks, punch-the-clock type of work. However there can still be crunch time there as the deadlines are real deadlines not VP-pulled-out-of-a-hat deadlines (e.g. tax filing deadlines, SEC reporting deadlines).