• Ever thought it'd be cool to have your art, writing, or challenge runs featured on PokéCommunity? Click here for info - we'd love to spotlight your work!
  • Welcome to PokéCommunity! Register now and join one of the best fan communities on the 'net to talk Pokémon and more! We are not affiliated with The Pokémon Company or Nintendo.

Those who work: do you have your ideal job?

I'm in grad school for the thing I truly love in my heart of hearts (directing theatre and film), so I'm using my undergrad degree in acting to pay the bills until then… which I'd say is a win for sure.

But there's never a timeline, and I think that suggestion is ridiculous. That idealizes a toxic form of "hustling" and devalues those that aren't instilled with privileges and opportunities to succeed. If it takes you 10 years longer to get where your idols/mentors were when they most inspired you, it's because there's no one route to happiness/success. Take the detours; learn lessons from the fuck-ups, because they're bound to happen.
 
Ideal? No. Happy with what I have? Partly.

My job is easy and has next to no real responsibilities. I self-manage with only a couple people in a position higher than me that can give me orders. I make good enough money that I don't have to worry about bills or necessities and can put back a fair bit without having to penny pinch. It's a very chill place to be, but you always want more. There's only one/two more promotions for me to go through (since I already have management experience and am technically at the same level as our team leads, as long as I have a good interview and get recommended for the position I wouldn't have to take the baby step in between where I am now and manager) before I'm able to look at being the top of our store and start making 6 digits - which isideal of course. But the two steps from here to there offer no great benefits over what I currently have while adding on a large number of responsibilities and unwanted stress.

The hours I have now kind of suck, but I've always worked this second/third shift junk so it is what it is. Moving up in the company would mean that could change, especially if I start looking at my path towards store manager, but there's no telling how long that could take and if it's even worth all the extra stress since I'm comfortable with where I'm currently at. It's a decision I've been fighting with myself over for about the last 7/8 months as things have continued to go downhill at our location, since even if the rest of the team isn't my responsibility it's still irritating watching things slowly degrade with each shitty new hire we get in on recommendation of someone else that does fuck all at work.
 
My ideal job would be something like, getting paid to sleep. Job I have now ain't too bad. Pay is decent, work at home, normal schedule. Just hate getting asked the same question 200 times every hour every day every week.
 
I probably do have my ideal job, even though I don't feel overly inspired for it nor wish to make a big career. I'm a researcher with one food in academia and one in industry. I do a lot of practical lab work and I control my tasks and days and work hours almost completely myself. I can work from home whenever I need to be at a computer, and my lab (and office) is 15 min away by foot. I don't hate my coworkers but I also don't have to hang out with them (I greatly prefer to keep private life and work life separate, it seems) and my bosses are nice albeit a bit messy. The pay is enough to keep me afloat with a little bit of savings for emergencies.

So yeah. I probably have my ideal job if I can ever raise my salary a bit.
 
Somewhat ideal. In theory, it's what I've been working towards ever since I graduated film school. Video editing was a huge hobby of mine back in high school, so it's kind of unreal to think I get paid to do that now.

But, as with anything you do 5 times a week for minimum 8 hours a day, it gets tiresome and loses its appeal. I don't always love it. But it pays well, it's creative and I can generally find some way to improve my skills. That last part is a huge motivator to keep on going.

The only downside to my industry is being a freelancer. I am not built for that lifestyle. I like structure and routine. Right now I don't know what I'll be doing for work in the new year. We're still a little while off from then, so I've got some time, but it's still worrisome.
 
For me the perfect job is when you have more income than loss. It took me a long time to get to that point. And to be honest, I despised my office job as much as possible. I felt like some kind of office plankton to be honest. But when I finally got sick of it.I decided to start my own business. As stupid as that sounds. I made a plan of action. I saved up some money. And I went to the best life coach program for training. You can't just create something all at once. It takes both moral and physical preparation. My plan was sorted out there with specialists. They decided how to properly allocate my money so that there would be enough to cover everything. And now I have my own clothing store. And yes, it's the perfect job.
 
Last edited:
Hi everyone, an ideal job is certainly not the one I am in now. Working as a project engineer now, while the prospect of one is quite good. Can earn more as you climb the ladder, I am having a hard time loving it, or at the very least liking it.
The thing keeping me sane is my wife, knowing the fact I have a family to take care off, i cant just pack up and leave the job.

But i do have a plan now though, to earn and save as much as possible within the next decade or earlier and open up my own shop.

To be honest, what i like to do apart from gaming, is cooking...and...doing other calming stuff, like knitting..etc (I am a guy if anyone wondering). I am in engineering just for the money i guess, my young self thought after a while i will love it. Nope.

The plan to now, save as much and open my own food shop in the future..HAHAHAH

To those younger generations, plan your future, do something you have passion for, find something you can do better at and at the same time like it, of course not everyone can be a pro gamer, and play games to earn, but there must be something else you love to do which can earn your income.

ifonlysleepingpaysmemillions
 
Not even close. I'm working on a degree and applying for an internship to hopefully help get my dream job, but fast food is not anything remotely close to my dream job.
 
It's ok. It pays well and I can schedule my work whenever I please. But I don't wake up excited about it or anything. I'm just glad the trajectory of my professional life right now is going up, and so are my finances. That's what matters to me.
 
Back
Top