Ask HN: I'm bored, want exposure to new things but I don't want a job
I feel I don't have good or new ideas anymore. I think its because I work alone in isolation. I feel like good ideas comes from life experiences and exposure. I think I need to experience new and different problems in my life. I'm still looking for something I can really build a startup out of.
I don't think I would last at a job though. I don't have a CS degree so its unlikely I can get an engineering position. I could probably land something in marketing/support/whatever. This may mean I get less time to program and thus improve less at programming. I feel like ditching a job after 4 months would be a bad thing to do. But, maybe I'd end up enjoying the job.
So yeah, anyone ever been in the same boat or have ideas on what I should do?
TDLR: I need more problems in my life.
17 comments
[ 3.3 ms ] story [ 35.7 ms ] threadchallenge yourself
Check it out.
Google Play: https://play.google.com/stores/apps/details?id=com.paid2save...
iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/paid2save/id818723109
You will need an access code: 72088
I have heard reports that some people with large networks are making $10,000 their first month.
What's Paid2Save? It's an app designed for people to save money at local, national, and online stores.
Check it out.
Google Play: https://play.google.com/stores/apps/details?id=com.paid2save...
iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/paid2save/id818723109
You will need an access code: 72088
I have heard reports back that some people with huge networks are making $10,000 their first month.
Worth a shot?
You're not the first person to have trouble finding motivation once they feel comfortable financially. Maybe there's some kind of product or service you can create to help with this situation. You know the target demographic has money to spend.
Here's one of Jacques's follow-up articles - explore his site for more http://jacquesmattheij.com/journeyman-project-trip-1-united-...
Two potential issues I could envision with this: 1) getting someone to hire you in the first place, and 2) feeling like it takes a job away from someone who needs it more. (In which case volunteering might be a better option: help the sick or elderly, the local food bank, puppies and kitties, etc.)
I think a lot of us suffer from the lack of variety.
DO others think about taking some quick gigs at other places some times?
After 2 months, you will have been exposed to plenty of ideas. Worst case, you'll have a great portfolio to show and will have learned a bunch of different technical approaches. Best case, you'll fall in love with one project and will have solved your boredom.
I'm waiting to finish my current project (I do freelance contracting) to be able to get back on my own projects and focus on something... but I have the same lake of good ideas lately, or at least I don't really believe in my ideas anymore.
You should consider working on really early stage projects, building MVPs, maybe for equities rather than money.