Long story short, I'm a veteran and I receive treatment for PTSD. I've struggled for years. Treatment is helping but I feel that I am no longer "hacking it". I have an easy job right now, but I have no idea how long it will last. I'm barely doing anything. I'm interviewing at a new company but I can no longer cut it when I get to the tech screenings. I don't sleep much, maybe 4 hours a night if I'm lucky. I have decent chops but I've never been amazing at the interview game and I feel like this time around, my mind is so fuzzy and stupid. I really, really need to just slow down and do something simpler, but I have kids and a mortgage to pay and I don't know how I can afford to stop receiving the income I have.I'm welcome to any thoughts / ideas / suggestions, but I'm especially looking for ways I can just slow down, change careers and quit tech altogether. I have a few irons in the fire, but nothing that I could get off the ground quickly and make a decent income. I'd really love to be a guitar teacher.
[+] [-] nickspicer1993|2 years ago|reply
I think it would be best to try and get to a state where you are sleeping properly and do not experience brain fog before making any larger changes. If therapy is not working try a course of SSRIs if you are not already one, coupled with really focusing on avoiding sugars, alcohol and caffeine, while drinking enough water.
If you experience no changes after doing the above after 4-6 weeks try to put together a game plan for long term change, that will require slow methodical thought about what you need and what your family requires. Best of luck and PTSD is the absolute worst, feel free to message me anytime.
[+] [-] dotcoma|2 years ago|reply
I would also try to add meditation and/or yoga, walking or swimming, or any activity capable of turning your worring mind off for a certain period of time.
[+] [-] epic9x|2 years ago|reply
I do have empathy and a frame of reference as someone who also struggles with quality and quantity of sleep - sleeping only four hours a night makes you a train wreck of a person. Even if you could and do this now, it is not sustainable and can create feelings of extreme burnout. You likely you have become numb to how vast an impact this is having on you. (I say this as someone who ignored this for years and realized I was losing weeks at a time to living in a fog of exhaustion). I urge you to work on this and then make a bigger life change.
[+] [-] n_time|2 years ago|reply
No PTSD but dealing with burn out I needed to find something else, and that's what I tried. So far it's paying off.
[+] [-] aisuujudjdn|2 years ago|reply
It's not an absolute rule that "boring" companies or whatever are walks in the park.
In a lot of cases they aren't because they actually have to make a profit and so they tend to be incredibly understaffed at least by the standards I kinda got used to in the tech industry. I can only speak for finance and insurance though, maybe the government really is slow paced but people said that about insurance before I got this job and its the hardest I've ever had to work and it isn't even close.
Now if most of the stress is actually coming from fear of layoffs, that genuinely is better in my experience, there havent been any programmers laid off in the three years I've been here, but only because you are working so much harder that they literally cannot afford to lay anybody off. Checks would probably stop going out on time if they did.
Anyway, definitely people should look into it and maybe interview around, I'm just warning everyone not to take the tech industry meme about sleepy banks and insurance companies at face value without a lot of evidence. If you think about it it never made much sense but I think everyone in tech falls for it due to us having a tendency to think we are the smartest and the dude-bro-fratboys in underwriting or <other stereotypically boring job> are all hanging out having a party all day.
[+] [-] RajT88|2 years ago|reply
(Everyone assumes a poster is a SWE here - not necessarily the case)
Tech jobs not involving programming:
- Support - Ops - TAM - Networking - Architect - etc.
[+] [-] michaelrpeskin|2 years ago|reply
Especially since you're a veteran, look at government (and in particular DoD) contractors. The pace is slower and as an SME you could contribute in many areas.
[+] [-] mrcartmeneses|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jacobmarble|2 years ago|reply
Now I work in tech (SWE and now Engineering Manager) at a SF startup.
I'm sorry you're going through this. Feel free to contact me at jacobmarble at gmail.
We moved from Southern California to the Idaho mountains a few years ago, because working for BigCo in BigCity was numbing. After the fun I had in college, and the intensity of the Army, it's easy to get bored and distracted by the beige walls and brutal politeness of everything since. The mountains have helped a lot, and I still get to work in tech.
[+] [-] Workaccount2|2 years ago|reply
I work in general STEM and the compensation gap even between tech STEM and non-tech STEM is huge. A mid level IT guy with a handful of certs will pull more than a senior chemist with a masters degree. And work from home to boot.
Just figure out how to stay in tech if you need a decent livable income and want free time.
[+] [-] dudul|2 years ago|reply
It's probably mostly me, but tech today seems so boring, dumb, and shallow. It was so much more fun 10 or 15 years ago.
[+] [-] askafriend|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] whatamidoingyo|2 years ago|reply
I remember wishing to sit in an office all day, programming, in AC, making lots of money. But, man, I miss the freedom and fun.
[+] [-] hondo77|2 years ago|reply
It's not.
[+] [-] ramijames|2 years ago|reply
After decades of failed therapy, failed pharmaceuticals, etc. what really worked for me was taking mushrooms and thinking deeply about myself, my life, and who I wanted to be.
It sounds nuts, but it dramatically changed how I perceive myself and my place within the world. It saved my marriage and my relationship with my kids.
I realize that it is utterly unorthodox, but nothing else was working for me. For those that I come across who feel like nothing is helping, I recommend trying it. Preferably under the supervision of a clinical psychiatrist, but otherwise if there is no other option.
It's been about 18 months and I'm a fundamentally different person today.
[+] [-] AH4oFVbPT4f8|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] nfw2|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] mandevil|2 years ago|reply
If you are staff how does that differ from any other non-big-tech company? Is there something (besides location in a LCOL area) that makes it more appealing than working as an engineer for any other small firm?
If you are on the academic side was that job particularly easy to get? I don't have any friends who are academic engineers, but my friends who got Ph.D's in humanities and hard sciences found building an academic career very difficult, is academic engineering an easier career to make and keep?
[+] [-] solardev|2 years ago|reply
I'm currently studying to become an environmental engineer (after burning out on web dev) and would love to hear more of your experience, if you did something similar?
Or if you meant software engineering, I apologize for misunderstanding :)
[+] [-] ethanbond|2 years ago|reply
Not a doctor, not a trial expert, but I probably have a better grasp on the system than a layperson.
[+] [-] potta_coffee|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] ilrwbwrkhv|2 years ago|reply
I feel communion and fellowship with humans can really help when trying to break out of a rut.
[+] [-] gbin|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] tacheiordache|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] potta_coffee|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] globalise83|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] whiddershins|2 years ago|reply
https://www.amazon.com/Good-They-Cant-Ignore-You/dp/14555091...
The short version is: Don't think of it as "get out of tech." Think, how can I move into a career that builds on what I already have in terms of skills and so forth, but has a very different day to day experience.
[+] [-] solardev|2 years ago|reply
I imagine there must be some scholarships for vets? And if you've never done this before, any US citizen should be eligible for a bunch of federal and state financial aid and loans that can help you offset the income. There are also many on-campus jobs (not necessarily just for youngins) that can provide a somewhat livable wage along with benefits and discounted tuition -- nowhere near tech salaries, of course. Might that be worth considering?
Afterward, I know many colleges also teach guitar, but I don't know if those teachers are actually considered faculty (i.e. full-time with benefits) or just one of their exploited "lecturers" =(
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Separately, a friend of mine is a "self-made" guitar teacher who mostly just played gigs at restaurants and cafes for a few years, slowly built up a student base, and now does it full-time, both in-person and online (via Zoom). His students love him... it was a hard road to get there (6-7 years of really really hard work) but he eventually made it work!
[+] [-] namuol|2 years ago|reply
Government help seems worth pursuing if you aren’t already. You may consider changing locale to cut living expenses or to arrange your life around your biggest expenses. Could refinance or get a home equity loan to float you while you look for a new path.
But I’m no finance expert and I’ve never retired or changed careers.
Overall the constraints here are probably financial. So your hard constraints are likely going to be what dictate your options. It might help to find a financial advisor to help put your constraints into clear terms so you can see what your options are.
Best of luck; I hope you can find some peace of mind and/or hope from some of the comments in this thread. Take care~
[+] [-] seabass-labrax|2 years ago|reply
If this is practical, you could gradually increase or lower the amount of sites you manage to keep an income up while you test the waters teaching the guitar.
(I'm assuming by 'tech' you're referring to software development)
[+] [-] UncleOxidant|2 years ago|reply
As for advice... I'm not sure what to tell you. I think if I were in my 30s at this point I'd look into being an electrician. The pay is pretty good and there will be plenty of work. And it's not likely to be automated for at least another 20 years.
[+] [-] hobs|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] hsjfbrbjrjrj|2 years ago|reply
Not to minimise your PTSD in any way, but I had all that when I burnt out.
My advice: Take a holiday, put down the software tools for atleast a few weeks maybe a month.... Build real things with your hands, play some games, spend time with your family... do nothing ... Please recharge your creative batteries!
*note: I am only looking at your problems and basing them on my experiences ... Please seek appropriate help too. The brain is something we need to get more help with and most people don't...
[+] [-] hxypqr|2 years ago|reply