Ask HN: Why do you do what you do?

2 points by splatzone ↗ HN
I thought I loved web development, but recently I feel like I’ve plateaued. I’m not wealthy, and now it feels like I’m working just to survive, not out of some divine passion. It scares me because I’ve recently turned twenty and I feel I need to start making some decisions.

This got me thinking about all the other people on HN. I know some people here can be very evangelical about their work publicly, but I want to know the true reasons people here do what they do.

Do you work to survive?

Do you genuinely think you’re changing the world?

Do you just love what you do?

I think knowing about other people's situations will help me a lot. Thanks.

4 comments

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Over the course of my 24 years in technology I've felt like this many times. It feels like you hit the valley floor and you don't see the mountains on the other side.

After the big Y2K push. I was making a ton of money and had lots of money in the bank, but was working on uninspiring projects that just felt like I was going to work just to pay the rent. I left that company and moved thru several positions with different startups. Some had passion and some where just created to steal money from investors (literally).

Whatever you're feeling now, will pass if you are focused on some sort of goal.

Take some time and think about what you really enjoy about technology, what you'd like to learn and where you'd like to go. Then create some kind of outline of how to get there. It will help you the next time you feel this way.

Good luck!

Great advice. When you're that young you barely know who you are, let alone figure out your life's calling. I'd just add that every step along your career journey (no matter how random or seemingly insignificant) will help you get there.
Thank you, that's very helpful advice.
I work for other people to survive. I work on projects that I find interesting to stay sane and hopefully change the world at least a little. Of course I try to keep those two lined up, but it doesn't always work out that way. That doesn't necessarily mean its time to move on... if you are in a stable work situation where you can pursue what you really want to be working on the side that can be a really good thing.

Could I do something else? I write a little fiction when the mood strikes if that ever took off I would be tempted to see where it went, but writing software scratches that same creative itch and is a much more reliable source of income.