I don’t dream of labor
Asklemmy
A loosely moderated place to ask open-ended questions
If your post meets the following criteria, it's welcome here!
- Open-ended question
- Not offensive: at this point, we do not have the bandwidth to moderate overtly political discussions. Assume best intent and be excellent to each other.
- Not regarding using or support for Lemmy: context, see the list of support communities and tools for finding communities below
- Not ad nauseam inducing: please make sure it is a question that would be new to most members
- An actual topic of discussion
Looking for support?
Looking for a community?
- Lemmyverse: community search
- sub.rehab: maps old subreddits to fediverse options, marks official as such
- !lemmy411@lemmy.ca: a community for finding communities
~Icon~ ~by~ ~@Double_A@discuss.tchncs.de~
Dream Job is such a funny phrase.
I think most of us don't want to work at all.
None of the dreams where I'm happy involve me having a job.
The question wasn't what's your dream life, it was what is your dream job. Are you saying jobs are equal in your preferences?
I made the move to my dream job as a UX designer from being a receptionist for a hospital. My work was fun, manager was great, people respected my decisions and input, I learned so much. I loved it so so much, but was laid off by my startup suspiciously timed with SVB going under. It's been so hard to get another job in this tech economy, but I'm hopeful.
Veterinarian, would love to work with animals. But I would need to go through sooo much school to make it a reality which I am not set up to do at the moment.
A lot of animal lovers dream about being vets until they realize they are the ones to euthanize lost cases.
I realize there are definitely tough aspects of the job but I still imagine I would enjoy it despite the emotional aspects of it.
I always struggled with this question as a kid. It wasn't until I was much older I realized it for the capitalist propaganda that it is.
pensioner...
If it has to be a job instead of being free while still having money...
- 100% remote so I can live wherever I want.
- 50k/year (€ or $, whatever).
- Not waking up early.
- IT job doing cool creative and challeging stuff with Powershell, Python and similar.
- No dealing with users, meetings or burocratic bullshit.
In retrospect, I think I would have enjoyed being a librarian. It seems so peaceful, even if the pay isn’t fantastic.
I was seriously considering going to grad school for a library science degree years ago but in the end realized it was going to be tough to support a family with the pay. I think there are some higher paying library jobs but they're few and far between.
Just a few of my daydreams whilst getting kicked by The Man:
- Video editing in TV industry
- Owning a cycle/Segway hire place at some beautiful tourist spot
- Buying, improving & selling property
Playing music
Statistician
Captain America.
What? I don’t dream of labour lmao
I would like to be able to do whatever I want whenever I want, and never have to sell my time, focus and body to be able to do so. Or to even just survive…
Anthony Bourdain's job.
Garden Hermit. Taking interviews from any interested rich people who want a weird guy hanging out on their properties
Doing my dream job now. I hustled hard in my 20s and 30s with several internet-based businesses that were successful. In my 40s, a bout of depression occurred where I realized I was unfulfilled (money truly isn’t everything). These days, after selling the businesses, I retired for a couple years, blew through my hobbies and interests, became bored out of my mind and set out for a new path.
I’m now in a career that allows me to help people finance the first home (mortgage lender). In the career, I’m meeting a ton of new people each week, clients, referral partners and more. This is what I wanted/needed, to not be a hermit in my home working online, and to start working with others.
The job is challenging but it’s also very fun. At the same time, I wouldn’t recommend it to those that need consistent stable income because interest rates have provided fewer transactions nationwide. In the perfect environment, most struggle to make decent income for a couple years and I’m no exception.
Looking back, it turns out I choose a good path, but in reality, had I just started volunteering in the community, I would have been just as fulfilled.
Operating a small art/manufacturing studio. Designing and hand-crafting things out of cloth, wood, metal, etc. would be the ideal situation (as long as I could still pay the bills with it.)
I know that folks have & will continue to do the "I don't dream of working"–thing, but I'll answer sincerely.
If I could do it in a way that could sustain me, I'd love to be able to design & make my own line of stuffed toys! I kind of do that right now, but it's not something I can do full-time and still survive.
I'd also love to do bearded dragon rescues/fostering/specialized veterinary care. I'm definitely not able to handle the schooling required to do any vet stuff, though. But I've done rescues/foster work in the past before I just couldn't handle the costs anymore.
I’m quite into linguistics so as far as potential jobs kinda related to that I don’t think I’d mind working in translation.
Unfortunately not sure how great the future for that is with the improvements in machine translation, especially since the only languages I speak are pretty widely spoken and so those for which that’s going to be most developed
Research is an area that might be a bit less prone to tech takeover.
Rally driver and/or F1 driver
Doing nothing, enjoying life to fullest
A job with very low responsibility, and very high salary.
Professional Revolutionary
Quality control for a vaginalplasty surgeon.