This might not be the best community for this, but I don’t know what job I want after high school. I’m afraid of pursuing a job that I’ll end up hating. How do I figure out what job I want when I grow up?

  • bfg9k@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Don’t worry too much about getting ‘locked in’ to a job, you can always do a career change, it’s a lot easier than you think.

  • SokathHisEyesOpen@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    College is a great place to start. Unfortunately college is ridiculously expensive these days, but community college is still pretty affordable. There are so many things you don’t even know exist in the world right after highschool. The world also works a lot differently than you’ve seen so far, so a college level education is really beneficial. Go to community college, knock out some Gen Ed courses, and take some interesting classes for your electives. You’ll learn about stuff that you didn’t know existed and you may find that you’re passionate about some of those things.

  • deadcatbounce@reddthat.com
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    1 year ago

    There is no such thing anymore as a job for life anymore that ended in the 80s. I don’t honestly think that’s there’s a career for life anymore either, that ended in the early years of this century.

    Asking someone to choose something to do for 50 years (if they’re lucky) at 16 or 18 is folly.

    Build yourself a portfolio of skills which you are proficient in and enjoy doing. I would include (1) languages in that and (2) the technique of communication over and above any technical skills you possess.

    I say languages because a second language awakens a different mode of thought, maybe not too much if the languages are closely related.

    I’m Gen X and was probably never conventionally employable. Company Roles I’ve had seemed to seek me rather than me them. I wish I had been much more aggressive about a second language much earlier on.

    It’s not the language itself. It seems to assist in fluidity of communication. I’m not sure that I can explain what I mean by that: the structure of French sentences differs wildly from English sentences sometimes, but about 30% of English words are French in origin. It seems to encourage me to thing about how I am conveying my idea in words without me being cognisance of that happening.

  • Jordan Lund@lemmy.one
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    1 year ago

    Nobody gets out of high school and gets the job they want when they grow up. ;)

    Your first job is going to suck. It’s going to be hard work. The pay and hours are not going to be great. You won’t be respected as an employee or often as a human being.

    What it’s going to teach you are organizational skills. Show up on time. Do the best job you can do. Admit your mistakes and learn from them.

    Carry what you learn there to the next job and the next job. Do better each time. Learn new skills. Find jobs that interest you.

    If you can, go to college for a STEM degree, network with other people and employers, and when you get out of college, you can do what you want.

    If college isn’t for you, find a trade you’re good at and enroll in trade school. Plumbers, electrictians, HVAC techs, mechanics are never out of work.

    Avoid: Retail work. Restaurant work. It will break you. Fine for when you’re in school, not if you’re out of school.

  • null_@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Try to find out as much as you can about what the job/career is actually like, ask people who are in that field, if you can try to get some experience as an intern.

    The worst thing you can do is focus on a major without considering what the actual work will be like once you graduate. Even if you love studying a topic, the actual work may be much less fun in practice.

    Try to get some part-time experience of your own as you can, even at sub-entry level/intern levels it should help you know better what kinds of jobs you would enjoy full time. It’s often hard to envision a job without having some exposure to the field.

  • cerement@slrpnk.net
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    1 year ago

    [cynical rant – take with a bucket of salt]

    you don’t

    you pick something that you are competent at that pays the bills and keeps you alive and gives you enough free time to work on what you actually want to do

    traditional boomer advice was to pick something you love, but after putting in endless hours of doing it over and over just to make enough to keep you fed and provide a place to sleep, you will grow to resent it with a passion – for your own mental health, you absolutely must maintain a separation between the job and your personal life

    • pulaskiwasright@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      You should pick something that pays the bills and gives you free time to do what you want, but it’s good for it to be something you find some enjoyment in. Not necessarily something you love. But something you can get some level of satisfaction from learning and doing.

      • zoe@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        yea, money is king. the feeling of relief when u find out u can afford ur medical bills by urself.

  • moobythegoldensock@geddit.social
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    1 year ago

    You need to figure out:

    • What you like
    • What you’re good at (or can become good at with training/a degree)
    • What people will pay you to do

    If you like something, you’re good at it, and people will pay you to do it, that’s a career. Stick with it your entire life.

    If you’re good at something and people will pay you to do it but you don’t like it, that’s a job. Work it to pay the bills, but don’t be afraid to jump ship as soon as something better comes along.

    If you like something and are good at it but no one will pay you to do it, that’s a hobby. You’ll need to supplement that with a job to get by.

    If you like something and people will pay you for it but you’re not good at it, fake it ‘till you make it and hope no one notices.

    If you only like something, you can git gud or find something else. If you are good at something but don’t like it and it doesn’t pay, stop doing it. If you can get paid but you don’t like it and can’t do it, don’t waste your time pursuing it.

    Obviously, if something is no to all 3 then it’s not for you.

  • DoisBigo@lemmy.eco.br
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    1 year ago

    You want the job that is offered to you, pays good, and won’t feel like hell every day. This job may or may not be related to your field of study, but you better study something useful if you want to be taken seriously.

    Stop thinking that you can pick and choose, sometimes you can, sometimes you can’t. Some people can, most people can’t.

  • Poggervania@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    That’s the neat part: you don’t.

    Truthfully, it’s a huge thing to ask an eighteen-year-old to plan for the rest of their life over the next couple of years. For some people, they might need to take a year or two off before even thinking about going to school again; others, they might go to a trade school instead, or just not even bother with college all together.

    I think the “best general advice” I would give is to just try out community college for a bit and take classes, join clubs, and/or participate in activities that interest you - don’t even worry about gen ed stuff until you’re sure you want to continue into a 4-year college for a bachelor’s or higher degree. Start working jobs that either genuinely interest you or offer a decent wage & benefits so you can at least have some sort of “work experience” to fall back on, and just explore stuff that interests you or sounds interesting. And if you’re in the camp of “I don’t have any interests”, then do random shit and see what sticks or not.

    In general, I think the worst thing to do after high school is nothing and stay stuck in the same position in life. As long as you’re doing something that you want to do, that’s gonna be a step in the right direction.