Page 1 of 1

Speaking of jobs, is there anyone in here, like me, who doesnt like their job?

PostPosted:Thu Jul 01, 2004 9:03 am
by Flip
<div style='font: 12pt "Cooper Black"; text-align: left; '>Its been a year now in my 'career' of public accounting and i have to say that it is slowly driving me insane. I've decided that i do not like a desk job and i do not like working in this profession, which is a shame because i did enjoy learning accounting in college and i am pretty good at it.

The main problem is that it is just too boring. Even when working on a tough problem that interests me i find myself falling asleep and reluctant to finish it. Hell, i just showed up today and already i'm posting instead of finishing these financial statemens that are sitting right in front of me.

I've pinned down that i only like 3 things about my job: client interaction, things that involve analytical skills, and individual (1040's) tax returns. Most of my job in the off season, non Jan-April, involves auditing which i understand well, but find terribly boring. Tax season is nice because i get to work on 1040's, but they made me work 60 hours a week during that period, which sucks.

I've decided to switch careers, and have a few options available. Both involve getting my CPA (which i am close to doing, that stupid test is rediculously hard) so that is given no matter what i choose. The second step toward option 1 i started a few month ago, which was volunteering for my local fire department. After i have my CPA, a few years experience, and good volunteer work on my resume, option 1 is applying for a position in the FBI. I hear they like accountants, and i have a very clean background. Being an agent would, of course, be damn cool and i would be out of public accounting. The application processs is tough, though, and takes almost a year to get through, so i would have to endure working for this CPA firm for quite a while, which i dont really want to do.

Option 2 happened to come out of the blue. Volunteering for the fire department has been totally fun and i'm thinking of going career. You have to pass a screening test which is administered next month and then pass a physical test, which could be 2 months away. The desk job for the last year has put me a little out of shape, unfortunately, so i would have to train pretty hard. I was in athletics in highschool and active in clubs in college, but man does a desk job erase all that fast. The good thing about the fire department is that i could still get my CPA and apply for the FBI, and then atleast during the year long application process i could be doing something i like. The fire department doesnt pay as well as public accounting, though, so along with option 2 i would try and start my own little tax practice during the busy season for a little extra income.

In spite of the money, i think option 2 is the way to go. All i want is to like my job and not hate getting there in the morning! Is it too much to ask? Kim seems supportive no matter what path i take, but she is a little concerend about the money since we just bought that new place. I've signed up for the fire department test and even if i pass i can still drop out of applying, so it doesnt hurt to take it.

Life is full of tough decisions. In college the only thing i worried about was what beer to buy and what game to play when i got out of class.</div>

I hope it works out whichever way you go.  Just understand with the FBI...

PostPosted:Thu Jul 01, 2004 10:48 am
by Lox
<div style='font: bold 9pt ; text-align: left; '>that they can and will put you in whichever FBI location they decide. You have pretty much no say in where you go other than to turn down the job altogether. I was interested in the FBI as well, having a computer degree and such but I'm not willing to move out of state at this point in my life.

I do agree that you need to enjoy what you do or you will be miserable. Go for the fire department job. If money is a little tight, you will find a way around it. It's good that she's supportive. Not many women can do that and be nervous at the same time. :)</div>

PostPosted:Thu Jul 01, 2004 3:39 pm
by Derithian
<div style='font: 12pt ; text-align: left; '>My old job before monday was terrible.....telemarketing selling credit cards to poeple for $300. very shitty and I felt bad scamming poor people out of even more money</div>

PostPosted:Thu Jul 01, 2004 4:14 pm
by Baldarov
<div style='font: 9pt ; text-align: left; '>At one point I was making and prepairing 1000 some cardboard boxes a day, on my feet for 8 hours in the same spot. I understand what a crappy job can do to a mentality. But you just keep looking for a new job and work through it. It looks like you have the right idea.</div>

PostPosted:Thu Jul 01, 2004 8:05 pm
by Sephy
<div style='font: 12pt "Times New Roman"; text-align: left; '>Do what makes you happy. The money can be worked around.</div>

Sounds like you'd like programming, but then again, you'd have to spend some years learning...

PostPosted:Fri Jul 02, 2004 12:52 am
by SineSwiper
<div style='font: 10pt "EngraversGothic BT", "Copperplate Gothic Light", "Century Gothic"; text-align: left; '>On that note, I'm happy with my job. Third shift, so nobody bothers me, and basically my bosses just let me code on some Perl projects for work. This week, I created a mass mailer tool (if you have InsightBB and got a letter, that was my work) and added some features for an online unavail/work sheet for the call center. Last week, I used my Employee Scheduler script to generate schedules/lunch/breaks for 145 employees, and modified a script that the call center uses for querying information on the CMTSs.

My projects are everywhere throughout the place, and I enjoy Perl programming, so it works out.</div>

PostPosted:Fri Jul 02, 2004 2:07 am
by Ishamael
<div style='font: 14pt "Sans Serif"; text-align: justify; padding: 0% 15% 0% 15%; '>Sitting around and doing nothing all day would make me happy and so far, I haven't found a way to do that and still be financially secure. :)</div>

PostPosted:Fri Jul 02, 2004 2:08 am
by Ishamael
<div style='font: 14pt "Sans Serif"; text-align: justify; padding: 0% 15% 0% 15%; '>Is it the nature of the job that you hate or is your current place of employment? I'd decide which one before switching careers as you seem to like a lot about what you do, while certain aspects (which may be entirely employer related) drag you down...</div>

PostPosted:Fri Jul 02, 2004 2:48 pm
by Tessian
<div style='font: 11pt Dominion; text-align: left; '>My job is at a concession stand getting paid less than $6/hr...is there a reason I should LIKE it?</div>

PostPosted:Fri Jul 02, 2004 4:07 pm
by Lox
<div style='font: bold 9pt ; text-align: left; '>You can't find anything better?</div>

PostPosted:Fri Jul 02, 2004 7:39 pm
by Tessian
<div style='font: 11pt Dominion; text-align: left; '>I had a MUCH better job last summer but they're not hiring this summer. And being car-less most of the day limits my availability</div>

PostPosted:Fri Jul 02, 2004 8:00 pm
by Julius Seeker
<div style='font: 12pt ; text-align: left; '>That sucks, tough insurance policy? =P</div>

PostPosted:Sat Jul 03, 2004 12:29 am
by Tessian
<div style='font: 11pt Dominion; text-align: left; '>haha car insurance? no. It's me not having my own car.</div>

PostPosted:Sat Jul 03, 2004 3:40 am
by Zeus
<div style='font: 9pt ; text-align: left; '>Flip, I'm going through the same process up here. If you're this close, just get it then change. You can always use it to get a better job, you just leave public accounting once you're designated. Or you can use it to fall back on. Either way, it's dumb to quit now</div>

PostPosted:Sat Jul 03, 2004 4:10 am
by Sephy
<div style='font: 12pt "Times New Roman"; text-align: left; '>Oh Ish, you card! (ps me too)</div>

PostPosted:Mon Jul 05, 2004 9:10 pm
by Flip
<div style='font: 10pt Tahoma; text-align: left; '>Do you have to pay for school by yourself? If not, college is the best time to get a car since you dont have to worry about rent, utilities, loans, etc etc. As long as you have a job that can bring in 300-400 a month you're set.</div>

PostPosted:Mon Jul 05, 2004 11:15 pm
by SineSwiper
<div style='font: 10pt "EngraversGothic BT", "Copperplate Gothic Light", "Century Gothic"; text-align: left; '>Ugh...I'm certainly glad we own our cars. That's waaaay too much money to be fronting every month.</div>