- Joined
- Jan 8, 2010
- Messages
- 84,239
- Reaction score
- 77,031
- Location
- NE Ohio
- Gender
- Male
- Political Leaning
- Liberal
This is my typical day
go to work, go to a friend's office and shoot bull for about 30 minutes
sit down, look at my outlook calendar, realize i don't have any meetings for an hour, spend 15 minutes checking on systems
play with phone for 45 minutes
sit in meetings, sometimes contribute, sometimes wonder why I was invited to things that have nothing to do with my job
play with my phone some more
sit down with one of the people who work for me, go through their projects, give advise, expectations, praise, etc as needed
go to lunch
go to more meetings for most of the afternoon
by about 4, I am antsy and ready to go. go hang out with some work friends or play on phone
leave precisely at five
weekly i do exciting things like review IT engineering change requests, hold the company IT change meeting (I am the change manager as well, yay), solve some sort of crisis in a few hours that have taken others a few days to not figure out, maybe design a system, do light programming, stuff like that.
Then after all that. Once every couple of weeks or so, I ask for more duties, my boss tells me I am overloaded and that pretty much ends the discussion. (he works half a country away and we only talk a few times a week, so he doesn't know what I do with most of my time)
needless to say, I am finding my job dissatisfying and I am probably burnt out
so back in college, the finance dept pretty actively tried to lobby me to join their program (I graduated with a 3.9 GPA and they thought I would be good with numbers). so I have been thinking lately I am planning to go get my masters next fall. I am toying with the idea of getting it in finance and getting my CPA and just doing something different.
Any advice for those who are at this sort of crossroads?
This is my typical day
go to work, go to a friend's office and shoot bull for about 30 minutes
sit down, look at my outlook calendar, realize i don't have any meetings for an hour, spend 15 minutes checking on systems
play with phone for 45 minutes
sit in meetings, sometimes contribute, sometimes wonder why I was invited to things that have nothing to do with my job
play with my phone some more
sit down with one of the people who work for me, go through their projects, give advise, expectations, praise, etc as needed
go to lunch
go to more meetings for most of the afternoon
by about 4, I am antsy and ready to go. go hang out with some work friends or play on phone
leave precisely at five
weekly i do exciting things like review IT engineering change requests, hold the company IT change meeting (I am the change manager as well, yay), solve some sort of crisis in a few hours that have taken others a few days to not figure out, maybe design a system, do light programming, stuff like that.
Then after all that. Once every couple of weeks or so, I ask for more duties, my boss tells me I am overloaded and that pretty much ends the discussion. (he works half a country away and we only talk a few times a week, so he doesn't know what I do with most of my time)
needless to say, I am finding my job dissatisfying and I am probably burnt out
so back in college, the finance dept pretty actively tried to lobby me to join their program (I graduated with a 3.9 GPA and they thought I would be good with numbers). so I have been thinking lately I am planning to go get my masters next fall. I am toying with the idea of getting it in finance and getting my CPA and just doing something different.
Any advice for those who are at this sort of crossroads?
You really don't have to "decide to do something different" now in order to get your CPA. It sounds as though it would be very interesting to do regardless of what you ultimately decide to do with it. Surely some of the classes would be helpful in some way to your current job, so absolutely positively go for it!!! You might even find, after you got it -- or even as you were working toward it -- that it would provide a pretty lucrative part-time income for you seasonally.
Your current job responsibilities sound to me like your strength is in managing people and problem-solving. Working for an accounting firm? As a newbie, I'm not sure you'd be utilizing your strengths. *shrug*
But, at any rate, the only decision you have to make right now is whether or not getting a CPA would be fun.
I say, "Go for it!!" There's a certain freedom one feels when we say, "Let the chips fall where they may." And, to carry on with the old saws . . . Maybe you'll find, when you have your degree, that you're willing to "jump knowing a net will appear."
This is my typical day
go to work, go to a friend's office and shoot bull for about 30 minutes
sit down, look at my outlook calendar, realize i don't have any meetings for an hour, spend 15 minutes checking on systems
play with phone for 45 minutes
sit in meetings, sometimes contribute, sometimes wonder why I was invited to things that have nothing to do with my job
play with my phone some more
sit down with one of the people who work for me, go through their projects, give advise, expectations, praise, etc as needed
go to lunch
go to more meetings for most of the afternoon
by about 4, I am antsy and ready to go. go hang out with some work friends or play on phone
leave precisely at five
weekly i do exciting things like review IT engineering change requests, hold the company IT change meeting (I am the change manager as well, yay), solve some sort of crisis in a few hours that have taken others a few days to not figure out, maybe design a system, do light programming, stuff like that.
Then after all that. Once every couple of weeks or so, I ask for more duties, my boss tells me I am overloaded and that pretty much ends the discussion. (he works half a country away and we only talk a few times a week, so he doesn't know what I do with most of my time)
needless to say, I am finding my job dissatisfying and I am probably burnt out
so back in college, the finance dept pretty actively tried to lobby me to join their program (I graduated with a 3.9 GPA and they thought I would be good with numbers). so I have been thinking lately I am planning to go get my masters next fall. I am toying with the idea of getting it in finance and getting my CPA and just doing something different.
Any advice for those who are at this sort of crossroads?
Good advice above. Do it! Few things are less satisfying than being trapped in a job that bores you. I have been blessed to have done many different things, and while I can't recommend my approach to anybody else, looking back now I am uniformly glad I did all of those things, whether they were all successful or not. And they weren't all successful. Note that lack of success does not equal failure. Failure is when you do something poorly and don't learn a damn thing about it or you.
warning, i am drunk right now
simple fact is this. There is nothign in life I don't have the ability to overcome. I am blessed with some rather amazing skills, intelligence, resilience, physical attractiveness, and some other stuff.
In a while, I will get bored with accounting too and go be a scientist for a while or something. Its my nature. I excel and then get bored easily.
it makes me sad, most people struggle in trying to excel in only one thing.
You need to find a way to become a partner in a company...
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