Income vs. Career Enjoyment
Would you rather…
be filthy rich and hate your job, or love your job but have to scrape by?
It's not a trick question—and it's a question you will almost certainly have to answer at some point in your life. How do you answer it? By figuring out what's most important to you. And remember: there are no wrong answers.
Except killing orphaned pandas. That can't be most important to you.
So, what's most important to you in a job?
- A big, juicy paycheck?
- Stability?
- A creative outlet?
- Fame?
- Lots of praise about how awesome you are?
- Being the boss?
- Helping people?
- Working with children?
- Working with animals?
- Cool co-workers?
- Lots of important projects?
- Challenges to overcome?
- A great office?
- Lots of perks and benefits?
- Fat cash bonuses?
- A dog in the office?
- A clown costume you get to wear every day?
- A low-stress environment?
- Lots of responsibility?
Now, which of those things are you willing to sacrifice in order to rake in some extra dough? Would you be okay giving up the in-office dog? What about the ability to help people? And at what cost?
Of course, job enjoyment is different for everyone. For one person, being able to work in a big corner office with no one ever coming by is the dream. For someone else, that may be the worst misery since chem class. A "good income" is also be different for different people. For one person, a good income might be enough to buy a house, raise two kids, and take vacations whenever you want. For someone else, a good income might mean enough to have a private jet. And for others, it might just mean enough to live from paycheck to paycheck without missing a meal.
Whatever sacrifices you decide to make for cash—which, by the way—is not a bad thing—just remember: when you start working full-time, you'll probably be spending 40, 50, or 60 hours a week at your job. Assuming you sleep 8 hours a day (try it—it's good for you), that means you're spending 35-50% of your ENTIRE LIFE at work.
We hope you like it.