Ask HN: Taking a few months off?
I currently feel the burnout from a stressful project and commute that I have been doing for about 2 years. I started as a consultant with the idea that it would be a short gig, but ended up in a leadership role. I know this is something that is not to complain about, but this opportunity has afforded me an opportunity to take a few months off before looking for another job. I want the communities thoughts on quitting a job without something else lined up (based on my current experiences, it seems like the market is still quite ripe for developers) and how would future employers look at taking a few months off to myself. I would try and work on side projects and continue to learn the things I feel I am currently weak on, but won't get an opportunity to learn at my current project. Thanks All!
23 comments
[ 4.6 ms ] story [ 90.6 ms ] threadI've taken time off twice (eight months last time) and the recharge was great and worth it.
Financially, I think I have enough saved to continue my current lifestyle for 4-5 months and still have an additional 4-5 months of savings, but I don't think I want to be off work that long, 2-3 months tops.
I'm glad to hear others have done it and haven't had issues explaining to potential employers. It seems like having this luxury would be the best way to land a new job because interviewing can be a full time job in and of itself. In the past when I've moved jobs, I haven't been very picky, I usually jumped for new opportunities as they arose when I wasn't really looking too hard.
What would be the ramifications of taking the time off?
And of not taking the time off?
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Finally I just snapped and was unable to work or really communicate with anyone. I stopped showing up and felt horrible for my totally unprofessional exit. I had been barely sleeping and while sure the money was amazing I had no time to spend it.
In hindsight I should have worked on my communication skills and rapidly tapered down my efforts to a sane place. But I waited until I was just broken and had to bail.
However, it was in the end a much much needed rest. I took 4 months off work, got outside a ton, lost a bunch of weight, got my personal life and friendships recalibrated and jobs and work started showing up as soon as I was ready to work again.
Since then I have made healthier habits, and people actually respect me the same amount or more for having those habits. I also have learned tricks to still get an amazing amount of stuff done without burning out, which is largely communication, diet, exercise and sleep, all things I used to be awful at.
Take the break, it will be worth it!
Edit: and with 9 years of experience you already know how to learn, don't make the focus just more technology, at least make it a partial computer break.
Thank you!
I left without a job lined up. It took me less than a month to find a new job that I liked. I had several offers and declined a number of them early on as I looked for something better.
You can certainly do it. I suggest you take two weeks off to relax and prepare for interviews, then hit interviews hard and keep practicing for whiteboard interviews.
Best thing I ever did. It tweaked my brain somehow. I don't know how to describe it, but I certainly came back a different person.
I booked a ticket into Mexico City and another ticket home from Buenos Aires, and let my travels take me where it took me. I hooked up with people I got on with and we travelled together until our journeys went in different directions. It was surprisingly easy to just go wherever my whims took me.
10/10 would recommend to anyone.
If you wanted to take time off - to find yourself;travel and enjoy being young; take care of family who were ill; recover from burnout; work on a side project; or just take time to carefully consider and select your next opportunity - and you could afford to do it, more power to you.
If you're an engineer who was trying to find a job for 3-6 months in the current climate and couldn't, that raises a red flag for me. Companies are falling all over themselves to hire engineers. If you're unhirable now, you're probably unhirable, period.
Note that my standard is a bit different for other specialties. The market for many other professions is much more employer-friendly and less employee-friendly. A customer service manager or a PR specialist who needed six months to find a job may be great to work with and great at their job but just battling a weak job market and absurd levels of competition and gets more leeway from me.
In any case, like a lot of things, it comes down to framing and telling a good story about it.
That time and space was invaluable for me, gave me the time to work on myself, to figure out what was important, and come back stronger.
I feel a lot better for doing it - but even ignoring that, I'm sure it has had a huge ROI on the missed income I 'spent' by not being employed.
From 01.01.2014 - 30.05.2015.
Got a season pass for the local swimming pool.
Learned to play the bass guitar.
Did some game development.
At the end I even invested some time in my masters degree (still not finished, meh :D)
Also, since I'm living polyamory I had much time to invest in my multiple relationships.
After it I started a new job where I make 20% more than in my old one AND can do all this from home, which wasn't much of a change since I did most of my masters degree team projects already remote.
So assuming the answer to the above is "enough", then yes. Quit and take some time. Actually, I'd recommend booking a flight somewhere interesting, then quitting. Otherwise you run the risk of spending your downtime in your apartment reading HN in your boxers.
As to your career, it will survive just fine. My resume is more Gap than Work most years, and it has never hindered finding another gig. I actually found that traveling stocked me up with lots of good stories that could be pulled out during an interview to win "this sounds like a fun guy to work with" points. It turns out that those are actually scored higher than "this guy has memorized bubble sort" points in the minds of the people that will be making hiring decisions, so I always considered travel to be a net positive for the career.
Good luck!
Excited yet terrified.
My worry has been that I am spending a portion of my life savings on this trip. But as my sister rightly pointed out, life savings are for major life events and this is definitely one of those events.
I've actually incorporated travel and quality time off into my daily life: 3 weeks on, 3 weeks off. I wrote a post about my experiences here which you may find useful: http://remotejournal.com/blog/how-i-remote-work/http://remot...
1. This is what 365 days without a vacation does to your health http://qz.com/485226/this-is-what-365-days-without-a-vacatio...
2. The 2015 Sabbatical: Why We Should All Take a Month Off - https://www.riskology.co/sabbatical/
By the way, thank you for making this post. It reminds me that I have to take a month off because of my works.