I know im young and stuff but i feel lost like i have no sense of what i want to do now or later. How did you decide what to do with your life? What free wisdom can you share?

  • @RBWells@lemmy.world
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    152 months ago

    My mom always said “you don’t need to know what you are doing for the rest of your life, just decide what you are doing for the next five years”.

  • @jbrains@sh.itjust.works
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    2 months ago

    You don’t have to commit to any one thing in this life. I’m doing very little at age 51 that I was doing at age 27.

    I also wasn’t doing what I truly wanted to do most in life until my 40s.

  • @Perspectivist@feddit.uk
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    72 months ago

    I’m not sure I know what I want for life but I have a number of things I don’t want so I’m trying my best to steer clear of those.

  • BigFig
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    52 months ago

    I fell into it. Needed a job, saw a sign, liked it, now I’m manager.

  • randomcruft
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    2 months ago

    I didn’t… I stumbled in to it, by accident, realized I knew what I was doing, found a full time job. It pays the bills now… but man it’s not fun anymore.

    To be honest, “what do I do with my life” is not the right question.

    What do you want to do as a career, is different. You can have a career / job and still do “other things with your life”.

    Separate the two… find something you can tolerate that pays well (as another poster said), then go find things that make you happy when you do them for enjoyment.

  • @deranger@sh.itjust.works
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    42 months ago

    You don’t need a job you love, hardly anyone gets to do that. It’s amazing if you can, but a job you can tolerate is really all you need. Keep your eyes open for opportunities, take them if it feels right. Trust your instincts.

    Save some money. Having a bit of financial freedom can drastically help you with having flexibility to do different things, and you need to do lots of different things to figure out what you like.

    You will have to sacrifice comfort at some point and take some leaps into the unknown when the opportunity presents itself.

    Most of all, get out of your hometown. The single biggest influence I’ve seen on people turning out great or people getting stuck in their ways is experiencing different things. College can get you part way there, but travel and living away from your hometown, especially if you can swing something international for a while, can help you immensely.

    • @Tujio@lemmy.world
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      32 months ago

      A job is a place you go where somebody pays you to do something you don’t want to do. You then use that money to fuck off and do the things you do want to do.

      There are few people in the world who legit like their job.

  • @angrystego@lemmy.world
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    32 months ago

    I didn’t. I was just as lost as you. Things just came about and everything turned out quite fine, so looking back, being lost kind of worked for me. It’s helpful not to turn down good opportunities, I guess.

  • @suburban_hillbilly@lemmy.ml
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    32 months ago

    Stop looking at other people’s answers. Every time I ever looked out instead of in for the next big step it ended up being a gigantic mistake that blew up in my face.

    • @naught101@lemmy.world
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      12 months ago

      Good answer. Ironically, pretty much all the answers here are good, and worth looking at (because they are mostly broad, general advice)

    • @pugsnroses77@sh.itjust.works
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      12 months ago

      the only reason I look out sometimes is because my world is so small and I know there’s so much else out there that I don’t know about. Plus, I was a sheltered child so asking outwards means I get a variety of perspectives to choose and learn from rather than whatever bs my parents taught me

  • TragicNotCute
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    32 months ago

    When I tried programming (software development) for the first time, I was doing something silly like drawing a football field and its various markings. I got stuck on a part I couldn’t figure out and eventually gave up for the day. I woke up in the middle of the night with the solution and remember the excitement and joy of solving the problem. After that point, I kept doing it and trying to make choices that got me closer to doing it as a career.

  • @new_guy@lemmy.world
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    22 months ago

    I found out that it’s more important to be flexible and be able to grab opportunities when they appear than to make the “right” decision.

    There’s no right answer on how to live your life.

    And besides that we live in times that are changing so rapidly that what you might be doing in the next 10 years donesnt even exists right now.

    Just keep your brain sharp and your body healthy and you’ll be set.

  • @whotookkarl@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 months ago

    Don’t let yourself become a caricature of yourself, step outside your self expectations and find ways to face your fears. I didn’t really know what I wanted to do until my mid 20s. You don’t need to plan it all out from the outset, spend some time trying stuff and learning who you are and what you wouldn’t mind spending time on getting good at.

  • Jo Miran
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    22 months ago

    I think the best advice I can give is "stay focused, alert, and highly flexible. I certainly did not end up where I thought I was going to go.

    • At 16 I wanted to study psychology.
    • At 17 (college freshman) I studied philosophy assuming I’d go into law like my father.
    • I graduated with a finance degree
    • At 21 I began a career in IT (sysadmin) by turning my hobby into a job
    • At 26 I began mixing my love of information security, and backgrounds in finance and law.
    • At 31 I started my own company because my field was too niche to justify working for only one company
    • At 52 I shitpost in Lemmy while trying to keep this country’s shit infrastructure from collapsing.
  • DagwoodIII
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    22 months ago

    I found this book when I was almost 30 and it changed my life.

    “Discover What You Are Best At” by Linda Gail.

    It’s a series of self tests you can complete in a few hours and a list of the jobs that use those skills.

    If you have a job that you don’t hate, you’ve solved a lot of life’s problems.

    • Rhynoplaz
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      22 months ago

      If you have a job that you don’t hate, you’ve solved a lot of life’s problems.

      I’ll second this. There’s a reason people are paying you to do it. It won’t be fun every day, but not dreading having to go to work EVERY DAY is worth its weight in gold! Except for the whole “being able to spend it on good and services” thing.