top | item 41231291 (no title) citizen_friend | 1 year ago this sounds a lot like the psychology of having nothing to lose vs something to lose. You play more aggressively and are more successful in the former case. discuss order hn newest kranner|1 year ago Arguably GP is already successful in their current position with respect to overall satisfaction, if one treats satisfaction as a boolean. KolenCh|1 year ago Define successful. I think you two had an opposite meaning of what successful is. citizen_friend|1 year ago Having a job he likes that pays him money he wants. That’s the criteria outlined. He’s just afraid it might end up being a job he doesn’t like.There is a myth that higher paying jobs must be more miserable, but it’s rarely true. load replies (1)
kranner|1 year ago Arguably GP is already successful in their current position with respect to overall satisfaction, if one treats satisfaction as a boolean.
KolenCh|1 year ago Define successful. I think you two had an opposite meaning of what successful is. citizen_friend|1 year ago Having a job he likes that pays him money he wants. That’s the criteria outlined. He’s just afraid it might end up being a job he doesn’t like.There is a myth that higher paying jobs must be more miserable, but it’s rarely true. load replies (1)
citizen_friend|1 year ago Having a job he likes that pays him money he wants. That’s the criteria outlined. He’s just afraid it might end up being a job he doesn’t like.There is a myth that higher paying jobs must be more miserable, but it’s rarely true. load replies (1)
kranner|1 year ago
KolenCh|1 year ago
citizen_friend|1 year ago
There is a myth that higher paying jobs must be more miserable, but it’s rarely true.