jhonny9546
Master Don Juan
Hi! I've recently started considering career paths.
In my 20s and 30s, I experimented and studied, but I still haven't found my daily life.
However, having worked with lawyers, accountants, notaries, builders, fishermen, merchants, etc., I find their careers truly fascinating and envious, because they've succeeded. Even though their jobs have pros and cons, I know people who've been doing it for 30, 50, or 60 years.
They've always done that one job/profession, and they've become increasingly expert at it. (They're also rich and successful.)
So I asked myself: how did they choose?
Most of them had no choice: they inherited it, or they had to follow their parents' advice.
Others, however, focused on studying "safe" subjects (e.g., lawyers).
In the end, it was easy for them; they were "thrown" into it, while for everyone else, like me, looking for something for life is incredibly impossible.
Your experiences?
In my 20s and 30s, I experimented and studied, but I still haven't found my daily life.
However, having worked with lawyers, accountants, notaries, builders, fishermen, merchants, etc., I find their careers truly fascinating and envious, because they've succeeded. Even though their jobs have pros and cons, I know people who've been doing it for 30, 50, or 60 years.
They've always done that one job/profession, and they've become increasingly expert at it. (They're also rich and successful.)
So I asked myself: how did they choose?
Most of them had no choice: they inherited it, or they had to follow their parents' advice.
Others, however, focused on studying "safe" subjects (e.g., lawyers).
In the end, it was easy for them; they were "thrown" into it, while for everyone else, like me, looking for something for life is incredibly impossible.
Your experiences?