Sign up to Morning Brew for a totally free selection of high quality business, finance and general interest articles delivered direct to your inbox every morning - morningbrewdaily.com/howmoneyworks
My dream job were boring from the start. That's what I love to do! In fact, any job can be boring. The more you understand, the more boring it becomes. That is the truth! Any job can get boring! Never separate jobs, as they can all be complicated. The complexity makes it boring. Therefore, it is not worth dividing the work into stylish and the like. Really not worth it! That is the truth! This is what, makes work for work!
I would love for some physical labor equivalent perspective to be brought to this topic. I'm in Vegas and I work at a semi truck dealership as a shop foreman. I can tell you I love what I do but I very much work every day of my life... and honestly I couldn't see myself anywhere else at the age of 26
Yeeeees! My friends are all so baffled that I've worked the same job for years. But I have a manager I like, my officemates are all so pleasant and nice, the company culture is relaxed and non-hierarchical. I am never contacted outside of office hours. My manager actually seems embarrassed to ask me to do the rare once in 6 months overtime. And I get paid handsomely for overtime and holidays. I'm fine with my boring job that treats me well and lets me live the rest of my life, thank you very much.
It really is, you don't essentially take work home with you, there's really no stress when you take time off, you're not constantly stressed you're going to lose your dream job, cause its just a job & there is alot of peace that comes with it just being a job
@@BeefIngot it could very well still be what they love doing. Outside pressure can either be encouraging, or it can be crushing. A small and tolerable level of stress is what makes things meaningful. It just comes down to every individual situation.
@@haroombe123 depends on the job. Not all boring jobs pay well or offer greate life balance. I would say that most jobs that ppl dread are low paid and on long hours...
yeah. Like I'm considering a job and I look at the salary they offer me.... it's the most ever offered to me and very well paid (though taxes takes a big cut and it still isn't enough to be able to afford a mortgage coz housing prices here are ridiculous).... but I'm like yeah I don't know bout that.... coz considering what they ask it's actually kind of low paid. It is a 9-6 job, but I'll have to travel 3-4 hours a day and I also have to do half a study on the side, coz 'quality improvement' as they call it.. yeah don't know bout that, the points I have to get for it doesn't look like quality improvement to me; more like community service. Not to mention all the boring fucking meetings OUTSIDE work time that could have easily been put in a fucking email. So all wrapped up I'd be working 60-70 hours a week... that's not a job, that's a fucking career.
Boring jobs are only good if you get paid well. If you’re not making that much money, that boring job can be absolutely soul-crushing and you will feel like your life is slowly rotting away because you don’t make enough money to do anything fun while saving money too
I have a boring job and I had an extremely bad life before that. I was disease, starving, and basically tortured. People need to experience more bad things to appreciate their lives more. People in this situation arent really calibrated to know between a good life a bad life. This why some spoil rich kids disgruntled and complained about the smallest things. I am also unbelievably terrified that my life will end up in the same position as before. I know my life can be a billion times worse than it is today and I am thankful I have food in my belly, a roof over my head, good health, and decent people around me.
@@m.houdeib United States. I just came from a bad family and escaped when I hit 18 and needed to be around a lot a bad people for a while. The thing that got me through it is God. I legit would had ended myself multiple of times if he I didnt believe.
I’ve always had shitty jobs. I got a “boring” office job a little over a month ago and it was the best thing that could have ever happened to me. I’m making more than ever, I have almost zero stress at work, my boss is wonderful, my coworkers are a joy, and the work, while tedious, is very easy. I’ve also had more energy to do workouts after work and have already lost a few pounds. This honestly IS my dream job. Because it’s helping me live a better life.
I had the literal exact opposite experience. I had a salaried job at a big bank working admin on a small team, the management was terrible and the pressure was insane. Previously I worked in another office for a small company and while the office culture was good for the most part, they were in financial trouble. Office jobs are not all made equal
My motto has always been "instead of planning for a vacation, create a lifestyle you don't need to take a vacation from". Helped me decide to pick low stress jobs most of my life, and I've noticed for me things have been phenomenally better than for most of my friends
This, 100% this. Leave the city, because that's the opposite of a vacation, and relocate to refuge from insanity that is the countryside. Get a stable, boring job. Enjoy the positive interactions and challenges of manageable scale at work. Come home and enjoy your free time. Revel in the ability to go outside and find nature instead of a concrete hellscape. Realize that everyone grinding out 50 hour weeks in the city will never be as rich as you no matter how much money they make.
Because of Covid I now WFH (office has no space for me anymore). I make 80% what I could if I was job hopping, but due to seniority I work, in reality, limited hours. I work out when I want, mow the lawn when I want, etc. WFH IT jobs are a cheat code to life.
I'm a musician. The best job I ever had was working customer service for a museum, I just sat there with my friend and we took two hour lunch breaks and no one noticed and my brain was not fried at the end of the day - plenty of time for music and socializing. Now I'm a tenured professor of music at a prestigious university, and I'm overworked, stressed out, and at the end of the day, I just want to go home and watch RUclips videos like this one.
I was a janator at a gym during highschool and college and worked 4-5 hours a day in the evening just kinda hanging out and moping the floors, doing the windows. Aftere we closed at 10pm, I got in a free 20 min workout, a free shower and sauna in the pool. At 11pm I walked 2 mins down the block to home. Best job ever though little pay ($7.50 an hour back in 2015 in NY). Now I work in a call center in finance as a stock broker placing trades for people. I thought it will be fun because I really loved the stock market when I was younger but after in 2021 getting this job, the dam computer phone won't stop ringing for 14 hours straight! Ya can't stop it after one client hangs up 2 secconds the next one comes in...... Atleast we get health insurance on this one....
4:45 Looks like the tip was not taken for career choices. “Doing what you love for work, you wont love it forever” i was a music artist and audio engineer once I opened up a studio, i began hating it. The artists that had money to pay for services were mostly terrible, the artists that were great to work with and really talented couldn’t afford the studio time. I got out while I was still young. Now Im in IT. I can still love music and be stressed, annoyed, or tired of it.
As a retired support helper, I’d say the best job right now is working from home for an investment manager who hires you to handle records. I make over $390k a year. You just need the right connections and contacts to land a job that could change your life and your family’s future
Wow, this is amazing! You're absolutely right it's all about having the right connections to find a good job. Honestly, I've been looking for a job like this for a while now.
Please, I’d love more info on this! Some of my friends have been talking about it, and working remotely for an investment firm is exactly what I want! I’m currently jobless, so any help with the right information would be greatly appreciated I’m a great fit for this type of job. please help how can i apply.
To apply for a role like this, you’ll need strong communication skills, especially the ability to guide and convince clients about the best investment options. You don’t necessarily need extensive knowledge upfront, as you’ll receive guidance on working with clients. Experience in reading and writing financial reports is also important. For opportunities, reach out to Graciela Lynne Schriewer online, who helps people connect with investment firms.
Thank you so much! I just looked her up online, found her website, and contacted her through it. She seemed very legitimate, and I sent an email i found on her page.
My daughter, at about 12-13 years old had been doing artwork, both digital and traditional, as a passion for most of her life to that point, and very well i would add. We talked about possible career choices later on, so she can focus on things now to help her later with that career. We suggested art or design since she loves doing it... she told us she absolutely does not want to do anything related to art as a career, because its what she loves to do, and doing it for work would make her hate it... kid really has life figured out.
Your daughter is literally me 15+ years ago. My parents also told me to "use my drawing talent" but I had the feeling that being forced to do as told on a deadline would just make me hate drawing. Nowadays I'm, after a few weird excursions, ended up doing QA and Test Automation, as well as UI/UX on the side. Luckily I find that very fun as well, though I initially underestimated just how much you need to understand about something to properly test it. Can't know if something is broken if you don't know how it's supposed to work in the first place :)
@@Rettomus Yeah, one of my friends had gone to art school(racked up the wonderful student loans), loved doing art... he now owns a FedEx delivery area and is quite happy...
Yeah. That's excactly what I was thinking 10 years ago when I was 16. I am a car guy and love working with cars but I didn't want to be a mechanic. I feared that I would lose the passoin towards cars if I would work with them 40 hours a week. Now I work a boring office job and wrench cars during the weekends. 😁 I have no idea how I managed to come up with a logic like this back then but I'm happy I did.
Only reason I’m going to the risk div of a bulge bracket next month is for the name on my resume. Hoping to grind it out for a while esp while Im juggling law school at night since the office is just a short walk from campus. No need to be sexy, just want lots of cash with as minimal work as possible lmfao.
I have a boring job and I absolutely love it. My bosses are so lenient. No one wants to apply for this job because it’s either too boring or overwhelming. They can’t keep people. So they treat us so we won’t leave
@@ExNihiloComesNothing high liability. Hard at the beginning. Bit of chemistry, bit of algebra. But once you understand it and how it all works together the easier it gets. The schedule is probably the best part. 3, 12 hour days one week and 4, 12 hour days the next. Mostly sit down job. And you get to use a laboratory! No degree necessary.
My job is super boring and I love it. I work in a small warehouse doing pick and pack, returns and booking in stock. My boss is super lovely. His says that all we do is put stuff in a box and send it out the door your home life is more important. Are peek time is October to December so it can get super busy but the rest of year I spend a lot of time on my phone just waiting for orders to drop on my screen. Best job in the world!
True happiness is doing a passion as a living, and after your day to be able to pursue other passions. I'm in medschool, and oh boy it's the best life (for me) . it's such fulfillment to enjoy be able to enjoy most of your awake time, for most of your life. And when I have freetime, i do other passions and hobbies: gaming, music, working out, piano etc. Medicine is on top of being fascinating and so easy to fall in love with, it's actually useful knowledge. (ex: theorical physics, also fascinating, but it's really abstract). And to know it will get even better as you graduate: good pay, social and financial status, and most importantly a sense of meaning in life (and duty): being able to make good things and help people and be rewarded for that. Knowing people count on you when you wake up. Sounds really naive, but when money and passion are no longer a concern, a sense of purpose in life is important fulfillment if not the most important. But the hard reality is only a few privilege get to spend their day doing their passion, and in their free time other passions. That's why such fields are highly competitive, everyone wants that, not only for money, but because the more important reasons previously mentioned.
@@AFuller2020 It depends on your definition of underachiever, achievement can be on any area including the things that will not really much at the end of your life
I have a desk job with the federal government. We work at home 4 days a week, with 1 day a week in the office. The work might be "boring," but working at home is awesome. I can sleep in, and not have to worry about dressing up nice and commuting. And on days when I don't have much work to do, I can get away with taking two hour lunches, or doing the laundry.
@@digitalmaijiin6236 I don't want to disclose the specific federal agency I work for, but I can tell you that I work in a finance position. The job requires a bachelor's degree in accounting. We don't deal with the public, we basically work by ourselves, with an occasional team meeting. That's why work at home works great for us. Whether we sit by ourselves in our cubicle in the office, or stay at home, it doesn't matter, it has no impact on our work.
Just retired from the military (still on terminal leave). Our civilian force was 90% reason why I retired. Breaking up with the department of defense was the best decision I could have ever made for my mental health.
Just wanted to note that there is actually a phenomenon called "bore out" (caused by too much boredom at work) with the same effects on health as a burn out. So working a repetitive job that feels like it's producing no value has risks too. However, working a boring job doesn't automatically mean that your work doesn't produce value and is not appreciated, so I think it's important to differentiate between "boring" jobs and "soul sucking depressing" jobs and to keep those in mind while searching for a job.
I’d make a suggestion that I use personally, just because I have a boring job in an exciting company. But, I take jobs that I can grow out of. The keyword is grow. I’m young tho’ I guess the mindset is different. If you can’t grow in your field, you’ve potential grown out of what it provides you. You’ve learned how to deal with different kinds of management & employees, a certain work load, you got bored and the job doesn’t interest you anymore, even to where you don’t wanna rely on the stability of it. I always suggest moving with the company. If it has a branch on the opposite side of the world, do the boring job in an exciting part of the world. There’s a lot of solutions to boring out without having to switch a job. A lot of people just don’t see the possibility. That’s only if you actually like your job to at least use as it as a means to an end.
Yes, love this. Im starting a boring job at my dad's company that I'm actually very excited for due to the decent pay and good company culture. What helps make it not meaningless is a) it's for my family, continuing what my dad has built, personal value in it for me and b) it's a flour mill, so it's essential food that everyone in the country needs. After pursuing passion in my career in my 20s that burn me out, I've revalued what a career means. Excited to try out a more grown up approach to work with more reasonable expectations of fulfillment.
I just retired from being an industrial electrician. I didn't work until the machines broke or were not required. When the machines were not running I was on overtime doing maintenance to avoid breakdowns. The breakdown were high pressure but generally fixed quickly. In between, I read, studied, learned keyboard, practice my golf swing, slept and anything else I could come up with. What a life! And it paid quite well! Trades is where it's at.
@@thegamingfox2533 Generally prone, in industry downtime can cost tens of thousands per minute. Great idea to have me busy all the time but if I get a call and it takes an extra five minutes to get there no one is happy. Industrial electrician, I mainly work on the computers, do repairs as needed, I try to think ahead and replace before repair is needed. Lots of people seem to have issue with that. Generally they recoup my years wages every day. Millwritht is good but can be heavy, electrical can be extremely dangerous, you need to be aware and careful, lots of other trades but being the on call person is where the loafing comes in.
okay... Teachers who get tired of kids and parents. People in dangerous/unhealthy jobs. There are jobs that people definitely quit, even if their manager is good.
I actually loved my manager at the job I quit. But the company basically shit on our entire department while taking our work and praising the marketing department for the work that WE did.
I want to send this video to every young person I know. I got my “dream job” and it ate me alive. The hours were horrendous and constantly on weekends. Getting out and going to a boring job was the best thing I ever did. Great vid!
Dream jobs are demanding. That comes with the territory. You think Cristiano Ronaldo got to where he is by working only 9 to 5 five days a week and weekends off? He worked his tail off.
@@nimanixo Dream jobs are like dreams- then you wake up. There is no such thing as a dream job. A job is your effort to support others' dreams; conversely, if you are endeavoring to realize your own dream, that isn't a job, it is a quest.
Remember, folks, always stay in a job where you're slightly over-qualified, not the other way around. That way, your company will feel like they really have something valuable in you, and you won't constantly feel the need to over-exert just to meet expectations.
Another tip is to make sure to not work to your full capabilities everyday. If you give 50% everyday then management will praise you for giving 75%, but if you give 100% everyday and then start giving 75% due to stress and burn out you're on the chopping block for under-performing.
You should never feel over qualified or under qualified at your job. You should be qualified for your job. Being over qualified has just as many frustrations and struggles as being under qualified. This is not good advice.
Well... I couldn't get a job I applied for because I was told I am overqualified, but they were impressed with how I did during the interview. lol any suggestions? 😂 😅
Agree to an extent, although I think the term boring is being used loosely…. When your job is so boring/repetitive and mind numbing that all you do is the same simple task over and over and over again when you’re busy, and when you’re quiet you just twiddle your thumbs and stare at the seconds ticking by on the clock…. Makes the day seem like it never ends and it can make you feel incredibly lazy and unsatisfied. The less you do, the less you want to do, a different sort of burned out…. The brain need stimulation, there is a balance to strike
Ify I had a few Ware house jobs and worked at a fast pace and got stuff done a lot faster than everyone and time was still going by super slow. And even if I got everything done very quick it would be just more and more shit to do like it never ended I was never able to pull out my phone or walk around for 10 mins.
"You probably won't love it forever." I love fixing guns. After a couple years of doing it for a major police agency, it was tedious and mundane. So then I opened my own business. And I dealt with customer complaints, unrealistic expectations, supply chain delays, legislative changes and the fact that gun owners are just plain cheap. I was doing my dream job and it was awful. So I got a boring job working as a security guard and I'm actually a lot happier.
I use to work security for a middle school. The majority of the time I would literally sit on a chair in the middle of a hallway doing nothing or just making sure kids were heading to class. The hallway I patrolled was usually always quiet since I was very strict with the kids so they wouldn’t mess with me! Kids & even staff would tell me how boring my job was since like I said earlier I did nothing for the most part of the job, but I didn’t mind at all! Not to mention that the school I worked for offered good benefits. Payed vacation, sick days & holidays! It really wasn’t that bad at all!
I think something that goes unsaid is that "boring work" carries a considerable mental toll on the person. Spending 37-40 hours per week doing mind-numbing tasks with no end in sight (depending on how you define boring) can honestly make some people depressed.
Exacccctly. I quit a job doing payroll for a demolition company. Pay was nice but everyday around 2pm my eyes would glaze over and I eventually fell into a depression from feeling like my life was pointless.
Wow, 58-year-old here and I can totally agree with you. I'm a data analyst and have been since I graduated from college around the time of the dinasoure, got a boring job, rode the tech wave, did not EVER want to be a C-suite person, socked my money away in stocks, real estate, and 401k, had a family, worked only 40 hours a week, took cool vacations and now I'm retiring early super happy and fulfilled. My job was just that, a job. My life was what I made of it.
Debbieee.. you are the best person i could get my answer from... Why is everyone crying in the last 12 months that there is a new field called data analysis and it's the next big opportunity... All universities have started courses on it in some format or other ? You been one for so long already!! 🌸
@@thelayman6189 Ya, it cracks me up when I see the "new" field of "big data" 🤣Data has always been collected and it was always the job of a data analyst to report on that data. But back in my day they called us "Report writers" because that is what a data analyst produce.
It's sad how difficult things have become in the present generation. I was wondering how to utilise some money I had. I used some of it for e-commerce business, but that sank. I'm thinking of how to use what's left to invest, but I don't really know which way to go.
I understand how you feel. It's a little bit difficult to navigate things these days. You don't wanna lose whatever is left. I may suggest that you find a financial advisor who could give you thorough advice on how to go if you want to go the investment route. Also, the fact your business failed doesn't mean you should give up.
That's right. I have tried many failed businesses and it's just a step further. Don't despair. But to add, if you do decide to use a financial advisor, it's best you use someone who understands your special needs and can work with you. I learnt this from experience before finally finding one I can stick with. Now I make six figures from my investments alone, and even more from my businesses.
REBECCA NASSAR DUNNE is her name. She is regarded as a genius in her area and works for Equity Services inc. She’s quite known in her field, look-her up.
I just googled her and I'm really impressed with her credentials; I reached out to her since I need all the assistance I can get. I just scheduled a caII.
The main goal is to have time to take care of myself, having peace of mind and earning enough so I can have my basic needs covered. The older you get, the less you care about status. You just wanna be left in peace, enjoy a hobby, be with friends and don't have to deal with toxic people on a daily basis.
10000% agreed with this entire video. I'm a graphic designer and used to work in Fashion/Entertainment. My work was on some really major platforms which was exciting in the moment, but looking back, it wasn't worth all of the blood sweat and tears. Now I work in Real Estate/Tech for a lesser known company. Not only is the money way better, but the job is also way easier. I work significantly less hours, have a more than ideal work life balance, and I have so much extra time to breathe and do what I want from any location and I am never stressed. The work itself is not terribly creative and there isn't that much creative freedom but I learned the hard way that you should never look to a job to get creative fulfillment. Your full-time job should serve as a "part-time" job in the grand scheme, and living your life should be your full-time job.
"Your full-time job should serve as a "part-time" job in the grand scheme, and living your life should be your full-time job." Now that's a pretty memorable last line, ones corporate overlords would hate , and I one that I love. Very well said!
As someone who moved from a "interesting" to a boring job I cannot agree more, now having work life balance, absolutely no drama in my usual day and a much higher paid job, not bad in my book
Yup, made a similar move a year ago. Especially when starting a family this is helpful. I have no more work travel for a couple of days, better insurances and 20% increase in pay for less working hours and a lot less stress. More time for the family and hobbies and even develop a side hustle if I wanted to
This is fantastic advice. I've always worked for companies nobody has ever heard of in roles that sound extremely boring (internal comms). Yet, I've always had great pay, good benefits, job stability and the jobs are rarely stressful. I've been offered promotions and turned them down because I don't want to introduce unnecessary stress into my work. I'm happy where I am even if I am overqualified for the position. Some people put me down for having a lack of drive, but I know what makes me happy. I would rather know more than I need to know and be a resource than be stressed constantly trying to figure out new things. This video was almost therapeutic for me to watch, haha.
I have a boring job and I would say when you calculate the amount of time and stress I input I feel extremely overpaid for what I do and actually feel discouraged to pursue more challenging jobs because the salary premium is no longer worth it. Boring jobs allow me to allocate time to myself. I read a lot of books during my downtime which helps me improve myself. I’m literally feeling like I’m in semi retirement mode.
I’m an Sr. IT Auditor for a large bank, I can honestly say I never nor hear any child wanting to be an auditor when they grow; especially throughout my entire life and college career. Add it all up, it’s quite easily the best paying profession in terms of how much effort I put into for the amount I make. I may only actually put in 20 hours of work on average and 40 hours 2 months out of the year. And I get paid six figures, to then focus on my other side ventures outside of work. Kids it’s economics 101 pick a profession that has less supply and high demand and people will pay and spoil you. Edit: wow... didn't think my comment would blow up this much. I'll try to answer everyone's questions as best. Thanks again. FYI: I did start at the Big 4 accounting firms, so that definitely did help in case was wondering.
@@RAFAELFALA Software engineers in general do. I work from home, my job takes maybe 10 hours a week and pays around $150k. Just stay away from FAANG, they may pay you better but they'll work you like a dog.
I love my boring job. I’m a nurse and I work from home reviewing insurance claims. I remember I used to feel bad because all these nurses were going for their masters as a nurse practitioner. They would brag about it and the pay they would get. Fast forward 10 yrs later and many of them are burned out, stressed and want out. I get my time off when I want it, log off when I’m done and the company I work for is great and laid back. I love that you did a video on this. Nothing wrong with having a boring job.
200% agree with you: as nurse working in hospital, i have never seen so much so much drama,complaints and bow to superiors (not even in the army there is such level of obedience).
From my experience, there are two ways to be happy with your job. - easy and boring BUT your life outside the job is great. Family, friends, community etc - If you don’t have a life filled with love then then your job is your life. So a more fulfilling and passionate job is required In the end it’s all about balance. Your job takes up half your life while the other half is taken up by having a life. So they gotta balance eachother out
I just went from an exciting job to a boring job this month and not only do I get paid more but the job is so chill that I am still getting use to it. I was told to RELAX so many times from my co workers and I didn’t realize I was going over and beyond and on edge afraid I wasn’t being “productive”. Two weeks in and I have finally chilled out lol. I was so use to being yelled at for being too slow, having deadlines to meet, the fast paced environment and being verbally abused that with my new job I seemed unhinged. It’s been a whirlpool of emotions and crazily I was thinking of staying long term here. I felt bad that I liked it here because it’s a 180 spin on what I was doing before. Since I’m not doing a world changing job anymore I felt useless for a while but I’ve been happier here. I have more time for myself and doing things I love. I’ve noticed I smile more and started joking around again. 😁
I really like your comment and that you found something that makes you happy, but I have to mention that a 360 degree spin would end up the same place where you started, I hope this is not the case ;)
I'm a chemical engineer and I worked a boring job in office for a short time and then voluntarily changed to an exciting job that basically involved lots of travel, constant high attention work with highly toxic and explosive chemicals (minor error could lead to death or serious injuries). In the start I really enjoyed it however after five years and starting a family I noticed that I have a terrible mental fatigue, constant anxiety and stress related tremor. Recently I left and started a boring job, an advice I always give when someone tells me they need more excitement...no, no you don't
Great seeing a reply from a fellow engineer. Was pondering about taking on a more exciting opportunity from being in a good paying, boring job but this has got me really thinking💯
Somebody has to do the jobs that actually matter though, you know the jobs that create stress, anxiety...we can see the effects on society of people running away from fields that require detail, responsibility, and sacrifice but make the world a better place. Eventually without people building, growing food, and managing our complex systems everybody will be subject to crippling stress and anxiety of hunger, violence, and crumbling infrastructure. The robots aren't ready yet.
@@HowMoneyWorks ayy congrats! I heard you were in banking, must be good to get out of there. But then, it's usually a boring job so maybe you liked it.
Being bored at work 8 hours a day sounds more like torture to me. Time passes insanely slowly and you are mentally drained when you come home. I guess it really depends what kind of person you are.
Boring job = low stress/low pressure job, so you can have more time and energy to do your hobby or side hustle that you enjoy. Thanks for the insight👍🏻
I agree. I've never bought into the idea that work should be your "passion". A job should be just something that brings in money while you spend your time on better stuff. A boring job that pays well enough to live and gives me time to do fun stuff with my free time is all I need. Of course, most jobs don't pay a living wage, which is where the problem lies.
Had minimum wage kept up with productivity (due to advancing knowledge and technology), it would be ~$25/hr right now. All jobs can and need to pay a living wage right now
My experience was the opposite. All the adventure in my life was paid for by my employers, and what adventures they were! I understand that a lot of people want jobs that are predictable and unskilled or semiskilled, but nothing is as satisfying as being a hero.
I wholeheartedly agree! Work with what you love and soon you will start to hate it. My job policy is money in the pocket and an environment that doesn't make you crazy or depressive.
@NorthOfWindsor I agree, boring jobs are not meant for people who value other things in life than money. I’m willing to take a pay cut if I can at least have freedom to work as I please and be around people with similar interests/beliefs as me. Only thing I won’t tolerate is abusive management or disrespectful co-workers.
I think some folks are getting the wrong message here. A boring job does not mean you are lazy or work at some kind of low level position. A boring job should mean working hard (not working excessive hours, but working hard when you are there). A boring job is just a "regular" job vs. trying to find a job where you get paid for doing a hobby. Lastly, no matter how much you like something, it will become a job if you are doing it for a job.
"Managers will think to themselves that straight-up verbal abuse is really just a heated disagreement amongst peers who are too passionate about what they do." So true, I have seen this so many times. Every manager I have had in fact. This attitude seems to be very common, and contributes to a lot of the social problems we see.
Also, the simple difference between management being salaried and workers being hourly. People who always go home after 8 hours rarely become middle managers - and because managers are okay with long hours, they tend to see people who aren't as lazy. And treat them "accordingly".
Oh I agree, have seen it many times. What the ones in an upper position think is an environment where people can "freely speak their minds", becomes an environment where the ones in the lower positions feel bullied and disrespected.
@@adrianahlz1895 -- I hear that. Because managers have the power to retaliate and hourly staff don't, hourlies are going to always self-censor, meanwhile managers will turn their filters off and act like total jerks.
Nah, I got verbal abuse from one dude who just screamed at everyone (wife, customers) and more verbal abuse from another guy who probably had imposter syndrome and short guy insecurity and eventually got 7/8 experienced employees to leave the group. They were both just dicks.
Doing something that feels unfulfilling for 40 hours a week is not an aspiration. A boring job is only good if it ridiculously highly paid so you can work less hours a week to have more time to do what you like.
I think the fine line is not hating your job. If you hate your job there is nothing that can make up for that. However, if your job is bearable but just boring, that isn't nearly as bad. Perhaps boring is not the best word to be using...maybe 'mundane' is a better word. I think to many people want to define their existence by what they do to earn money. There is nothing wrong with mundane work because someone needs to do it for the world to continue to function.
@@pikachu-zt9fq Don't get me wrong, it's a nice job and I like it, but it's not for everyone. the amount of endurance and mental strength needed is MASSIVE
*I think the retirement crisis will get even worse. A lot of people can't save because of low paying jobs, inflation, an insane rental rates. And now that home ownership is out of reach for middle class Americans, I was once homeless, thank God I was able to make $279k in forex bought my first house last week*
Congratulations you are really doing well , my finance are really in mess right now and great tip will really go along way in shaping my life too im open for idea
Hey sorry for late response I apparently used the FIRE movement to put my finances in shape you can research more about it and invested in Stocks and forex with the aid an investment enthusiasts(Alvarez Harry Flectcher)
Wow 😲I know this Man mentioned here . Alvarez Harry is really good with and on his job. He's helped a couple of families and individuals' finances, I'm huge beneficiary of his platform too
You don't have to be surprised, his successful story is every where. so many people have recommended highly about him, I'm also beneficiary of his platform from Brisbane Australia 🇦🇺@@RalphLewis-j4q
I worked in an industry I loved for 15 years, and it was soils destroying - the culture was toxic, the management was narcissistic, I was miserable and very broke. Now I have a “boring” admin job at a consulting firm, and I love it - I make enough money to not struggle, my workplace is largely drama free and pleasant, my good attitude is appreciated, and at the end of the day, I go home and live my real life and leave my work at work. I thought a desk job would kill my soul, and I was so wrong.
My god same! I worked in apparels purely. Loved running around and being on my feet. But then I shifted to tech. People are smart, friendly and innovative. Job is hectic at times and desk job but best decision ever!
I work as an accountant, about 4 years into industry. Earlier this year, after a few years in one company, I changed to a new job to expand to a higher level role. With that change came a 50% raise. My new job (and my old job) were boring. But I actually enjoy it, because I can zone in, play some music, do the work, and sign off. Also crucially, my new job is fully remote and my schedule is highly flexible. Boring jobs are underrated.
Omg I love that. I love studying finance/business/real estate if I could do that all day in a beach side condo and blast whatever I want it would be great!
I currently work in public accounting… and I do not have enough motivation to stay and live my life through busy seasons. I am going to see what other jobs are out there for me at the end of this year. Hopefully I can find a boring, finance related job!
@@nicolequintero4349 definitely Public accounting (from what I’ve heard) can be super intense. Personally I work for a startup but prior to that worked for private corporations and it’s much more relaxed. Wish you best of luck on your journey
I am in a different field altogether, but doing the work sounds similar. I do 100% home office and this is awesome. This work is sometimes a bit of all or nothing for work load, but technically that does not matter in the company culture I am in as I can still use my hours flexibly, my manager has said to me that I never have to work overtime if I don't want to and ifI do work overtime, I can just take those overtime hours off from another day. Only issue is that my work demands high consentration all the time for proper results, and as one with adhd, that can be a pain in the ass.
This. My husband and I work a boring entry level manufacturing job, as an aging millennial, and with the ~$20/hr each income in Kentucky, we afford a house, two cars, a month of vacation, and I spend most of my work day watching videos or playing games on my phone. I'm typing this at work. I actually spend almost no time on social media at home because it's what I do to pass the time at work, and when I go home I can focus on our dogs and my hobbies. And while I absolutely have the potential to do much more difficult jobs that require much more time and attention, I'm in a pretty sweet spot where work causes no stress in my life and the job pays for a lifestyle that most of my fellow millennials feel is beyond their reach. This goal is attainable.
I think this lifestyle is attainable in most places like Kentucky)in the world. The only problem is young people don't want to live in most places in the world, only the biggest most exciting cities where is very unattainable..
Thats why i love being a delivery driver for seed farms. You drive a lot, you dont have a lot of customers (only resellers) and you get to hear music all day long without a boss on your shoulders...
I’m so glad you discussed the idea of “do what you love and you’ll never work a day in your life”! It has never sat well with me because I enjoy my passions and hobbies precisely because there is no pressure to earn a living from them or excel at them; I can enjoy the activity for the sake of the activity and nothing else. It’s quite freeing. My job now is boring; I do web development and manage social media for a CPA trade org. I work remotely 35hr/wk, have an awesome manager, there’s a healthy culture that promotes work/life balance and self-care, I make a good wage, and I’m valued and appreciated. It allows me to achieve my financial goals and to pursue my hobbies (gardening, pole dancing, rock climbing, travel, reading, yoga and more!) in my free time. I’m just happy that I can do all the things I love and that my job is pretty chill!
@@Cookiekeks Seriously, she doesn't understand how lucky she is. That is many, many people's idea of a "dream job". 35 hrs a week remote in web dev AND you are appreciated for your work? Come on lol.
@@Cookiekeks Its an annoying job, too much stress and frustration for not getting enough paid (in France). You always have useless meeting , supervising and problems, all the time.
I entered my “dream job” and was miserable. After my 3rd job of that kind didn’t work out, I finally realized that it wasn’t for me. After working other awful jobs with high pay that stressed me out to tears, I’m finally in a job that I don’t hate. It’s low pay, but it’s allowed me to be peaceful, be on my own, and not to be bothered. And that’s what I really needed. Edit: Thank you for the likes. I never expected my comment to get so much attention! My job recently gave me a raise and I’ve been working some OT, so my money issues have been eased. Sending my best to y’all searching for a job that makes you comfortable both mentally and financially.
It’s a balancing act. I went from a high stress 106k job to a low stress 35k one. I love my 35k job but 4 years later, I’m heading back to the office because the reality is that 35k doesn’t buy you shit these days. I’m angling for a 70-80k role.. trying to split the middle. Good luck with it.
Haha as a creative person, I definitely fully agree with this. I work an animation job and I was miserable in it until I got "relegated" to retakes, which is essentially just glorified editing of scenes with mistakes. But when I became a retake animator, my days just got infinitely better. The instructions are clear, you don't have to do any thinking except in rare cases. My favourite retakes are just like, 10 scenes in a row of "move this camera to the left". And best of all, it gave me more time to pursue my personal projects. Some people say "your job must be so fun" and I'm like "no, not really, and that's how I like it." When my job was "fun" I was paid pennies and expected to do overtime. But the moment my job just became a job, one I could do well, with good coworkers and reasonable expectations, I felt so much better. My pay is better, my life is better. And all my creative juices go into the personal projects I can fund now with said job.
What’s so funny is that I’ve been trying to explain this to my family for YEARS now. And yet, no one seems to believe me when I say that I really just want a job with stable hours and good benefits so I can find fulfillment elsewhere.
As someone who just quit their dream job this video sums up everything ive been feeling the last couple months. I moved to LA to pursue filmmaking and realized the industry is super toxic with insane hours. It wasnt something i could enjoy my life doing. Now I’m in the process of looking for that “boring” job. Thank you for the video!
i'm roboticists and despite Data Entry being "boring" the job is monotonous enough that I can watch Big Hero 6 Series while doing it XD. Which is why I'l just do data entry while doing robots in my spare time. Yes I'm a San Fransican BTW XD.
I bring this up to people all the time. I went to art school and directly out of it I ended up doing a more corporate, boring, full-time job. It wasn't my exact field, but it was close to it, and I actually enjoyed it, but I was definitely bored a lot. After a couple of years I quit, moved, and started working my "passion" job thinking it would be more fulfilling. At first it was, and I was definitely excited to be doing it. Then relatively quickly the late nights, the long hours, the never ending stress of crunch, the job insecurity (freelance), and crazy entitled clients wore on me. I realized that the job and lifestyle just wasn't for me, but I felt bad since I had dropped everything to pursue this passion career of mine - the thing I literally studied in school. I did that work for about 4 years, and ended up with high blood pressure, depression and an anxiety disorder. I don't regret my decision since it was experience and a life lesson, but it made me realize that I want to do my creative work for myself rather than someone else. I am okay being in a boring corporate job with security/benefits and pursuing my art on my own time.
Exactly my story. Only instead of HBP I had a nervous breakdown and spent 3 months on bed rest. I only create for myself now and love the peace of my desk job. Boring jobs with great management is awesome
Same for me. I was hospitalized earlier this year and decided that I need to look after my health before I get older and it gets worse. I still do art part-time and it's been a lot less stressful since I don't have to worry about money anymore.
oh, what's your current job now? (asked a year later) no idea how to shift to a more boring job + i also graduated art school and it suuuuuuuuucks so bad LOL
Most of you (including the creator of the video) seem to be forgetting the fact that, to know that a boring job is preferable, you must have been able to experience some semblance of a "dream" job in the past to be able to compare the two. Without this experience, people would always feel bad about not being at their "dream" job and constantly work towards getting closer to it. You might say that this is a trivial matter, and that if people just started off in their youth trying to shoot for boring jobs to begin with, it wouldn't be a problem at all. Sure, but is that how humans work though? I don't think so. It is human nature to dream and hope for a better future. It is human nature to look for some kind of profound meaning behind their existence, and gunning for boring jobs all your life is not going to fulfil that. Ergo, this video will only be convincing for people who have already been to the proverbial summit of the mountain and decided to step down.
I had a dream job but didn't knew it at the time. Mail delivery. Like paid pretty well for that time, no stupid meetings, no stupid assessment talks, no outside work studies, no thinking, just turn your brain to zero and do the work thats asked. Now it's like I am working hours that's not a job, it's a fucking career... I'm no workaholic! Meetings outside work that could have been put in a fucking email, and I have to use my brainpower like 24/7 to keep up coz if I even screw up 1 thing, someone's eyes are in jeopardy. And for what? Like sure statistically I'd earn even more then my father did when he worked and would be considered middle class by income alone.... but it's still not even close enough to be able to afford a fucking mortgage! Like I read an article last week.... you need to earn about 71.000 euros a year to even start thinking about a mortgage. And it's the Netherlands, meaning you work your butt off for a mortgage (never mind the other bills) that you can basically afford maybe an apartment that's less luxurious then social housing that people live in here that live off state subsidies and barely work at all.... like wtf is the point of working anyhow then?
@@stijnvdv2 Sounds like you need to "go west" so to speak... Move to another area that doesn't cost as much to live in. Chances are it's going to be boring as hell, but hey, you can't have everything in life. I'd decided to go out on a limb myself years ago and move far away from the capital city - like 12 hours of driving away from the capital city. There isn't much around but there is still enough for my liking (I can still get fast food at least :P), and the rent's pretty cheap. Hell, houses are also actually sort of affordable around here, so much so that I am planning to buy one outright at some point without ever signing up for a mortgage. (Cuz fk mortgage, yeah?) At the end of the day though, only you can figure out the right answer for your own life, regardless of anything that I could say to you. Hang in there man. I have no doubt that you will eventually manage to figure it out, just as you have so far along every moment in your life. Keep going! :)
I recently just started an IT support job and it’s all that I love. It’s fixing routers, making sure inventory’s good, making sure that computers run smoothly. It’s by all accounts a boring job, nothing too wild, but I love it because it lets me have the freedom of finding solutions to issues my way and the work itself is just fun for me. So yeah I agree, a boring job is definitely much more fun and nicer than a more active job
A great reason to work a boring job is that if you don’t have to think too hard about what you’re working on, your thoughts get to be your own during the work day. That is, you can think about other things, such as art, solving problems in your life, how to get better at your hobbies, or whatever.
The only things you need from a job: the pay is good enough and the working environment is decent The rest is up to yourselves to live the most out of your life
I'm reminded of something I tell people very, very frequently. "Never do what you love as a job. You will eventually hate what you once loved." The only people who believe me are the ones who were lucky enough to go through it, and hoho do they understand now.
That is very true. I think there's a misunderstaning among people for what "loving' whatever they are doing is. A lot of people just think that something that is not stressing them out while doing that thing is them 'loving what they do' or doing some mundane repetitive stuff that they're used to the pattern of like an assembly line worker. For others, it may be their passion and things that give them joy on completion for not just completing it but enjoying the whole process. For the latter type, it really can ruin that passion or hobby.
Yup .. lots of people don't realise this, and don't know how the world actually works. Eg. the vets that wanted to work with animals, but just end up putting them to sleep on a daily basis.
While I live according to your motto (software engineer with plenty of free time making music), I disagree with it. Do what you love as a job only of you're prepared to sacrifice everything else for it. The more what you love is popular (music making, sports,...) the harder it'll be to make it. You have virtually no successful people in these businesses with work-life balance. If you are ready to sacrifice all, you're talented, motivated, lucky, and the stars align well.. You get to leave your mark in history with your work. Think great writers, artists, athletes. Some people are practically born to do one thing and it's only fair that they'll pusue it. For me, financial stability, time with my family, a healthy and active lifestyle and free time to call my own are way more important than whatever achievement, title, or working field. None of those things are worth the hassle, we're only on this planet once
@@pianoplaynight I completely feel you! For me as well, I want something stable in which I can live a simple happy life with my family in the future. I’m a college student, I used to have a huge dream of becoming a filmmaker and changing the world with my stories and whatnot. I was a film major previously. But I realized a few months ago that I do not fit into the industry-I truly don’t like all things glitz and glamour and I hate hollywood. I don’t want any of that, glitz and glamour, as I said, I just want stability and being able to be free to live as I am, living a healthy and active life with my family and dogs etc. I don’t want to suffer being like all those rising filmmakers and actors working 3 jobs to get a single chance for their story to be made into a movie or whatever. I don’t want to be living in instability. I’ve changed majors and schools now and am studying pre-law, which I have a passion in and believe it will be a lot more worth it to me. I make little films and videos in my free time and enjoy it a lot as a hobby.
I always taught of unskilled jobs as beneath me. Now I work in delivery and it’s the best job I ever had. Flexible hours, no boss, no dealing with clients, no meetings and no hr bs.
I've been giving this advice to my now teenaged and young adult kids, and their friends, for years. "Boring" is also steady, dependable and better for planning and mental health.
As someone who has been in the jobs market for forty years, I would like to wholeheartedly congratulate the video makers here on a job well done. They are spot-on correct. I would like to add a few more pointers. You have to decide which master you wish to serve: money? power? status and prestige? personal fulfillment? I suggest good old-fashioned *stability.* There is a definite satisfaction in filling a position that no one else in a given institution is doing or really even wants to do. If you are diligent enough to find that niche and are able to fit it, you have a pretty good chance of staying there without anyone clamoring to take your place. Nor will your employers be looking to get rid of you (unless you really mess up) because then they will have to _replace_ you. And that could prove difficult for the powers-that-be when what they really want is stability, too. Bottom line. Be the paid equivalent of a paperweight, a doorstop. Because even the most hallowed of halls rely on paperweights and doorstops.
@@Smoove_J As youngsters none of us dreamed of one day growing up to be as stodgy and mundane as we perceived of our parents (I did, anyway). But now that I'm there, I can see why my dad liked where he was at.
@@EmilyGloeggler7984 I appreciate very much what you are saying, and I think you missed the part of my comment where I said "decide which master you wish to serve." If plain, old stability isn't satisfying, then one should choose an endeavor more challenging. I'm just saying don't underestimate stability. It is a reward of its own ilk, doesn't impede other opportunities in one's personal life, and it is worth pondering and/or trying before dismissing it as "boring."
This video speaks to me as it's been my plan all along to find a "boring" job that's simple but pays the bills. I always wanted to devote as little energy to work as possible to have more energy after work to do the things I want to do like exercise, take a class, or eat out. It's important to separate work from your identify so you're not so consumed by work that you have no life outside of it. Here's to those getting by while still pursuing their passions on the side. Now take advantage of every opportunity that comes your way!
The most important benefit of my "boring" hotel job: I leave my work at work. I clock out and it's over, I'm not expected to do anything at home besides take care of myself and show up the next day with a clean uniform ready to rock. Tons of fringe benefits (discounted rooms, free food, coffee, and booze, discounted gym membership) along with great coworkers. If I screw something up, the stakes are never that high and there's always a fix. I have plenty of energy to go to the gym. The lobby itself is a beautiful space with high ceilings and tons of natural light. I like it so much that I'm happy to pull some overtime if someone calls out last minute, it's really not that hard and I don't mind the extra cash. 10/10 highly recommend hotel front desk as a boring, easy, comfy job. It's "boring" in the sense that you don't really make any decisions, but every shift is a little bit different because you meet new people and take care of different guest needs or issues around the hotel. So it's not completely monotonous either.
This is one thing about RUclips I feel like people didn't realize has changed over the past few years. It's not a "oh I just upload whatever I want and make money" career anymore. Everyone who's maintaining a successful channel today is constantly (and in some cases hopelessly) fighting against the dreaded algorithm. Back in the day there were only a handful of creators who had a chokehold over the entire youtube sphere. Now there are literally tens of thousands PER sector. While it's still possible to enjoy being a RUclipsr and many people do, it's by no means the same promised land of the 2012 days where all you had to do was go "Hey guys! Welcome back to another episode of my Minecraft Let's Play" and boom in comes millions of views. Believe me, I wish it were that simple... 😔 I would give anything to be able to experience the golden age of RUclips. Just like how you mentioned in your previous video on the content creator gold rush, now that everyone is trying to become one, the likelihood of success dwindles more and more.
You are correct in saying that you cannot just upload content anymore and guarantee that you will get any views but like with most things in life, change is enviable and things can evolve. With how many people post to RUclips now you truly do have to show your talent and be as good as the best if you want to make it or at least stand out and connect with an audience. It may be harder to make a rise on RUclips now but who's to day that is a bad thing.
Reminds me of all the "How to Retire at 35". The secret is always to work in online marketing while convincing yourself, and everyone else, it's not work.
I’m 42 years old. I’ve been working since I was 15. My experience has taught me that the biggest factor in my job enjoyment or hatred was the relationships I had with those who worked with me. Some of the crappiest tasks, such as burning shit in a war zone, can be fun if you’re joking about how much it sucks with your buddies. On the other hand, garbage coworkers can ruin your hobby-turned-job. So what’s the take away from this? I think you rarely have the choice of who you work with. So don’t worry about if you’re gonna enjoy your job or not. If you have a good coworkers it’ll be fun. So the answer is to find a job that pays the most amount of money you can get. If it’s fun, you have money and you’re enjoying your job. If it’s a crappy job, at least you have money. Just my 2cents
Also to add, find a job where the likelihood of good co-workers is higher. I like working with smart people and I have never regretted stretching myself to get into companies with a higher average IQ so that I could enjoy those daily interactions more.
THIS!!! I don’t know how many people who consider themselves to be intelligent, working in “dumb” companies complaining about their “stupid” coworkers. If you’re so smart, go find a better job! That shouldn’t be too hard if you’re as intelligent as you claim, right?
Yup, I figured this out some years ago. It's not so much what you're doing, it's who you're working for that determines whether you like your job. Unfortunately, most companies only care about money and will do whatever it takes to bleed you inside and out to make them their money. So naturally, most jobs suck. Therefore I've made up my mind to just go where the money is until I have enough to say "fuck you".
As a tax CPA - i agree! I dont do taxes for the love of it, i do it for the paycheck and that makes it easy it set boundaries. There's also a shortage because no one ~dreams~ of being a tax accountant as a kid. Highly recommend this career ngl also accounting internships are paid. dont do unpaid labor!
As someone considering going into tax accounting, what's the work/life separation like during the tax season? I've heard some horror stories about abusive workplaces and basically living at the office for four months of the year.
I wonder if that's the same for Credit Analysts. I believe they also need to be CPA certified and I don't think anyone dreams of being a credit analyst lol.
i gave up being a law enforcement officer to be a SCUBA instructor in the caribbean. best thing i have ever done. back in reality now living back in the uk because of family and problems with my rental property, however, i would sell my house and go and do it all again tomorrow if i could. live life for you, not for others. furthermore, i recently just quit and walked out of a well paid government job because of the toxic environment
I think this has a lot less to do with "boring being good", and a lot more to do with working conditions being very unnecessarily poor these days. Obviously that can vary on a case by case basis and is in many *specific* cases quite the opposite of how things have trended, but overall modern working conditions are just worse than they should be and even have been. Obviously boring jobs vs "dream jobs" greatly tips the scales and exacerbates or minimizes these problems, but I do think the culture overall is just too accepting of a lot of unnecessarily poor conditions.
Even if you had ideal working conditions though, doing your passion as a job is likely to kill your passion for it. Sometimes, it’s better to do something you’re already bored by than to do ruin something you love.
@@LEFT4BASS If doing something as a job kills your passion, it sounds like you're the problem more than the job itself. Plenty of people love doing their passion MORE as it becomes their job specifically because they get more freedom to pursue it at a deeper level. If someone prefers living for the nights and weekends and doesn't want to stay in their dream job, the issue comes down to two possibilities: either you have a poor work environment (which is completely unrelated to whether or not you're doing your dream job) or you're just lazy. If you just don't like deadlines and consistently doing the same thing over and over again, then it's most likely the latter.
@@salum6690 I don't agree with you here, there is definitely the possibility of added stress or repetitiveness that spoils your joy for something. An example is assigned reading. Many kids hate to read assigned books, but would happily read for their own enjoyment. There is also a matter of motivation. There is intrinsic (the act itself is rewarding to the person) and extrinsic (external rewards, like cash or fame). There have been studies that show when someone is given an extrinsic reward for something they had already found intrinsically rewarding, their motivation switches to extrinsic and they find less fulfillment in it than before. Obviously some people still find fulfillment and love what they do as their career, but I don't think it is right to blame those who don't and just call them lazy
@@kamille286 I agree with you. I have come to think of "lazy" as a condition stemming from profound contempt for one's environment. It's like being trapped and knowing you can't get out. Eventually you just give up.
I see what you're saying, Simon. And I think that may have been part of the underlying joke of this video, sort of like: those "Office Space" clowns didn't realize just how good they had it!
You made a point in this video that deserves more attention: the more people who want your job, the harder you're going to have to work to keep it. Nobody is getting in line to replace proctologists.
This is so true! My job is so boring, but I love my boss, work from home, and my stress level is at an all-time low. One of the managers asked if I would be interested in transitioning into something more. Um, no. I'm not a ladder climber. I love to work because I like making money. That's it. My job is not my life. It pays for my life.
@@kathrynnielson5689 thanks so much for being one of the only person here giving us an idea of what they do, not just making us dream to then refuse to tell us what's good haha
Can approve this. Did an apprenticeship as administrative administrator at a hospital and have been in the invoicing department for 1,5 years now after the apprenticeship. People are very chill but the work can be boring as hell at times. Things are not as modern as I'd like them to be. Some programs are pretty slow and it feels like they employ pretty much anybody that walks in the door. But still no stress, no drama, no corporate ladder. We get to work hybrid remotely. Only thinking of leaving to do such a job fully remote.
@@nerad1994 I went from being a general manager at subway to being a personal shopper at Walmart. I live in the Colorado mountains where it’s hard to find employees so they pay better than most Walmarts
@@NeighborhoodBasketCase I’m a manager currently looking for a new job. Had to work 106 hours during the pandemic and now I would welcome a boring job gladly!
I'm just 20 but what I've learned from my cough cough *dream job internship* was that it made me miserable. I was there for 2 months and I understood these things on a deeper level. I was ready to leave the damn internship within 2 weeks and the whole internship was for about 5 months, I quit after 2. Now I live by my own motto, "Fastest way to kill your passion and hobbies is to make it into a job". Now I'm learning a skill which is hard and I don't want to do it but pays above average and even sounds boring. Thank god I learned this early in life.
I agree 100% with this. I've experienced this first hand - the higher you climb on the corporate ladder, the more stress and anxiety you have to deal with. Even if you get paid more, it's not worth the damage that your mental health takes. You should avoid feeling like your job defines you at all costs.
The rich are money-minded; that's a lesson I've grasped from the very beginning. My desire to build wealth has always been strong. I’ve set aside $160K since 2020, and I’m eager to invest it in the stock market to grow my financial future. I’d love to hear any recommendations you have.
I think the safest strategy is to diversify investments. But if you need proper advice, consider speaking with a financial expertise. Don't get me wrong, you can do it on your own, but financial advisors have a lot more knowledge and expertise in this area.
Agreed, I've always delegated my excesses to an advisor, since suffering major portfolio loss early 2020, amid covid outbreak. I'm now semi-retired and only work 7.5 hours a week, with barely 25% short of my $1m retirement goal after subsequent investments to date.
My CFA, Judith Lynn Staufer, is a renowned figure in her field. I recommend researching her name online; you’ll find all her credentials and everything you need to work with a reliable professional. With many years of experience, she is a valuable resource for anyone looking to navigate the financial market.
Very interesting! Many years ago, I learned that local radio DJs (a pretty cool job back in the day) was really poorly paid. Even today, radio DJs average around 30k. It's close to minimum wage. The idea is, it's a "cool" job so people were willing to do it for what passed as local fame and apparent prestige. Tons of jobs are like that and this video gets at the deeper reasons why.
My job sounds boring and requires a long time to explain to people outside of the industry. I'm not a manager and I'm probably making the top 5% of what people who graduated with my degree make.
Yeah well, that might be an average of all DJs but in reality some make less and some make a lot more. That's partly because a radio can change from amateur in your garage, to college, to national network, or podcasting at all those same different levels and even worldwide... and partly because the entertainment industry is very much corrupt. Payola, which is the act of paying a DJ serious money in cash in order to get a certain song "spinned" on the radio, is unfortunately quite common.
One of the best pieces of advice I was ever given was this: "If you love golf, become a ski instructor. Do something that facilitates your ability to enjoy what you love, don't do it for a living, you'll end up hating it." Which echoes a lot of what was said here. Thank you for the reminder of that advice.
@@P.90.603 how do you get one of these good paying easy jobs though? Where do you look to apply? What qualifications do the companies seek? What job titles are you looking for that imply good paying and easy?
I agree with you 100%. I used to love reading and writing so I got a bachelor degree in English literature with a double minor in creative writing and business/finance. The only books I actually read in those classes were those I already read in middle and high school. I started hating reading to the point I'd cliff notes my essays or pick random pages to base essays off of. Once I read a book cover to cover and wrote a paper and got an f on it. I then picked random pages to base an essay off of for the next essay assignment and I got a and b grades regularly. Even only cliff noting the book netted me b grades on mutiple choice whereas I'd read the whole assigned chapters and get a c. Now I hate reading much aside from news articles and the RUclips comments and memes.
@@danielglidewell don't ever feel afraid or insulted for ever getting 'fired' from a job....Look at it as a stepping stone, incentive, a huge favor and a helping hand up.
Woah! This was the best career advice people could have ever asked for. I always believed in this philosophy but wasn’t sure if that was the right mindset. Thanks for reaffirming my belief system. A job is a place to earn money and build connections. Period.
@NorthOfWindsor I don't think our jobs should *have* to be the source of meaning in our lives. No problem if they are, but I think it's totally fine if you just use your job as a means to make money for something _else_ in your life that will give you fulfillment/enjoyment.
what good are connections if your goal was to work for a lazy company that lets you get away with being lazy though? As soon as you interview with your new "connection" - everyone will realize you're piss poor at your job and worked at a joke company? Amazon is a sweat shop and everyone knows it. But when people interview somewhere and have amazon on your resume its like a masters degree, because they know you can hack it. "So this is a new position that require quick thinking and dynamic adjustment. Can you describe your last job? "It was great. 2 hour lunches, boss was never in the office. Work load was light and no one ever checked it. Everything was mostly automated so i ran a report once a day and hung out in the cafeteria the rest of the time." "Got it. We'll let you know."
Started as a cleaner 3 weeks ago. Got promoted to team lead and then dayshift. Got myself worried I wouldnt be able to keep up from how detailed night shift was. Figured out a week in all Im expected to do is mop floors, change garbages and sanatize bathrooms. Half of my shift is me wondering how Im going to look busy, waiting for a mess to be made, or walking around wiping windows and door handles pretending they were dirty. Not high paying. Most of my stress is from hiding the fact I dont do a lot from my bosses (who arent even in the building I clean)
I gotta agree with this. I work technical support for a software company supporting our customers admin teams, and honestly it is boring. However, my company respects us. I got a performance based raise in my first year, something unheard of especially for new college grads in 2023. It pays the bills, has great benefits, retirement matching, and a good path for promotion in the future. I bet I could find something that sparks my passion, but instead I get something low stress 90% of the time, work from home, feel secure in my job, and pursue my actual passions outside of work. And they never bring me great stress because they don’t become my job.
I work with someone who tries way to hard to gain the company's recognition. I don't wanna be that guy. I make like 90% of the money that person does but I put in half the effort. That's how you do a job.
@@TrevorReidelthe Op is in technical support, so do I. I have an accounting degree, but honestly that’s overkill. If you are looking at degrees recommend an English or communications degree and a minor in computer science, accounting or finance. The English or Communications degree will help you a lot with being able to do any support role as most of the time you have guides to help troubleshoot issues. You don’t need a lot of technical knowledge, most you learn on the job.
This video came to me at just the right moment, it made me realize my job shouldn't be a major source of stress in my life. Applying for new jobs right now and realizing how qualified I actually am now.
@@angelachanelhuang1651 I agree, I am a hobbyist game designer so believe me I understand passion driving people. But a job that is your passion can be used to manipulate you and eventually make you hate your passion.
Agreed, I tried several different types of sales and while the sale was exciting you were never good enough. Now I'm an Insurance Underwriter. Hardly anyone knows what I do. Nothing exciting happens. I get to work remotely. Have great benefits and 4 weeks time off along with a bunch of holidays. It's almost zero stress and few people know how great a career it is.
So few people liking this comment suggests they really didn't assimilate the truth of this video. A lifetime of media conditioning to despise normality and seek the far-out will not fade away easily.
@@bill_the_butcher www.bls.gov/ooh/business-and-financial/insurance-underwriters.htm Requires a bachelors. I have a social science degree and underwrite ships, boats, yachts, marinas etc. I always liked boats. My company does equestrian (horse) insurance. Homes, financial advisors, trucking fleets, literally anything you can imagine is insured. There's thousands of open insurance jobs but people think its boring. You could be an aviation underwriter if you want, search indeed for underwriter jobs.
I do sales now as well. Funny enough my boss told me to try and NOT be the top sales person because it brings scrutiny on your work. Keeping middle of the road brings it own challenges but yeah corporations are never happy.
I love my boring corporate job. I work remote and there isn’t really “work” for me to do (or I do it in the morning and I’m free for the rest of the day) and I’m able to focus on my hobbies (which have turned into an awesome side business!). It pays good and I have zero stress.
Thnx for this vid! I grew up in a yuppie neighbourhood where everybody has either become a doctor or lawyer. I work at a bookstore and I love it. Not to busy, not to calm. No staring at a screen all day 40 hours a week and Never overtime, we close at 6 regardless. My coworkers never 'compete' with each other because there is nothing to compete for :) so the mood is always relaxed and amicable.
I had two very boring jobs when I lived in the UK and they were the best times of my working life. The first was in small village council office. I cant even recall what I did other than drink tea with my co workers all day and basic data entry. The other was in a call centre at the The Body Shop headquarters, all I did was answer the phone and enter product orders into the computer. That's it. Zero stress, great corporate culture and co workers. If I weren't retired, boring is what I'd be going for :D
I work a boring law office job, and it’s the best job I’ve ever had. I will not leave if I can help it. The place I work is steady, I know what’s expected of me, and this is the first place I’ve ever worked where I’m treated like a contributing member of the team. Every job I’ve had before this treated me like I was a buffoon, or unworthy of even being there. (To the point that I started believing they were right, and I was about to get out of the industry.) THIS place treats me like they actually want me there. They respect me, walk through ideas with me, explain to me when they want something new or different, etc. and nobody has EVER belittled me. It makes all the difference in the world.
Hello, that sounds very interesting, is it possible you could elaborate on the scope of your job, i'm an aspiring commercial contract lawyer and am always interested by the people who work in law and some of the stories I've heard and read are absolutely fascinating.
I think a lot what people consider a boring industry is highly subjective. Law, banking, or medical may be boring to some, but it really complex highly varied. Compare to a role, the fictional paper selling role and then you can get a truly boring industry. You may not be interested in law, but it is pretty deep discipline and there's plenty to learn and high a mount of versatility and sub specialties available. Compare that to selling paper or cleaning services. You want to work in a complex industry, but an especially a boring one with less competition.
My sister in law went from a highly stressful corporate marketing job to taking a paper filing position at a friend’s private law firm. She feels the same way 😊
I used to work in a factory. It was an easy job, with fun coworkers and supportive management and good work hours. I left that job to follow my dream and become a commercial pilot. I have now been working as a pilot for the past three years and I’m miserable. I deal with toxic managers, cut-throat coworkers, and a horrible schedule that forces me to live in hotels. Combine all of this in a career field that by nature comes with a zero tolerance for failure and to say I’m a little stressed out is an understatement.
I got into programming because I wanted to make games, but the more I heard about how the industry is using the whole concept of a dream job against people like me, the less I wanted to do it. On top of that, while making games in my spare time, I quickly found out that programming games isn't all that different from programming something like banking software. The only difference comes from the creative design process, which in any gamedev company would almost excusively be done by seniors who have been working at the company for 10-20 years. Nowadays I have a not very exciting job, but it still requires some problem solving involved in all software development. I make decent money, get nice benefits, and I'm not very stressed. And because it's not my dream job or my foot in some industry door, I can just leave whenever the situation changes or I get a better offer. So far I changed my job twice in ~8 years, and got almost double the salary, on top of other benefits each time. This leaves me plenty of time to work on games in my spare time 100% creative control.
Man so true. I went into software and AI with the dream of working for some cutting edge startup or company like TESLA and as I’ve gotten older I’ve realized I absolutely love the calmer “boring” (although I still do satisfying work) work environment that I ended up pursuing.
I've been a gamer for a while and I have a minor in Game Development. Seeing how the gaming industry has deteriorated, how AAA games are microtransaction hellscapes; it definitely puts "Game Developer" on the "Career options to NOT pick" list.
I had a boring job as a NJ Transit Police officer. It was one of the worst jobs I’ve held. It paid well but was not an “ideal” job by any means necessary. Leadership was terrible, and everyone from the bottom ranks to the top saw it as just a paycheck! That’s no way to live!!
This is so true. I’m 51 and I’ve worked in al kinds of “exciting” careers from entertainment to advertising. I was a child actor and achieved lots of notoriety before I was 18. In my adult years I’ve been a writer, director, photographer, marketing guy, PR expert, etc. See also: Lots of stress, lots of anxiety, lots of uncertainty and not enough money. Now I’m studying to get my insurance license and I’m hoping to get in with a big insurance company and work a nice boring office job for the rest of my life. I can’t wait. Im saying this with zero irony. And the best part is, many of these boring jobs are now remote or at least hybrid. This video is way more accurate than people know.
I hope it works out for you. I’m looking at the job market and the one common issue I see with working for a big insurance agency is they micromanage you to death and most expect you to put in overtime. Pros and cons to everything. Of course, if you are great at sales, the money will be good. We all have to determine what we value in life and go from there.
I work in accounting which is widely considered to be a boring field, but finding a job in it was super easy and it isn't hard to find another one if you want to switch things up. It also pays well enough to fund my other modest hobbies.
I'm bad with numbers and dread such jobs but I would take it up as a challenge to pursue it. However, my interests are in creative pursuits, mainly music and cinema. Maybe I'll get to play a person who does accounting ha.
There is a difference a job you love and doing something you love for a job. My last job as a field engineer demanded grueling hours, uncomfortable working conditions and a lot of travel. It was awesome, every day was a competition against other competting firms and assiting a client to crush the other operators. The completion drove me and I enjoyed construction. I would not on my own time try to level the hill in my back yard or build a pipe line. The idea that you need to love the subject is flawed, you need to love how you are working. Competition, analytics, marketing not necessarily what the subject is.
2 years ago I was a software developer, now I am a data analyst. I loved software development and programming, I loved it so much that when I got home from work I'd be thinking about my job. I'd say that it was TOO mentally stimulating. I couldn't for the life of me separate my personal life and my job. Now that I'm a data analyst I can still get the challenge and mental stimulation I enjoy but I'm also not constantly thinking about work.
@@monkemode8128 For a solid 6 months of the year the job owned me. 80+ hour weeks, work every day. It consumes my time, my health and relationships. But I really did love it. Like you I had to step away before it consumed my marriage and missed my kids growing up
@@KennTollens Exactly why a hobby or something relaxing shouldnt be your job. There are roles and skills that are used in other areas that avoid tainting what you love
I’m a speech therapist, needed a masters degree to get this career. It’s fun working with others but the amount of paperwork, meetings, and extra time planning sessions is something I didn’t think about. I love what I do but I get home exhausted.
Im currently studying City planning and my "career goal" is to get into government. It's very well paid and probably the only employer that follows worker protection laws to a tee. Any overtime gets converted to holidays. No working on weekends. Regular wage increases. Best job security, I would be basically unfireable after 2 years of probation. Also great benefits
Good plan to get into government work. As a businessperson I ask you to please make sure you study economics and business on the side or make friends who run small businesses so that you can have a better understanding of how your planning and decisions effect the economic ecosystem around you. In my experience government employees are so detached from how their decisions actually impact the people around them because they live in a bubble of their government work. They understand the social issues, but they don’t understand the economics and business impact of things which directly impacts the social issues. I wish it was a requirement for government majors to get an education in business… if you can educate yourself in this or have friends in business who can educate you, you will truly make an impact in government with a more well rounded view.
As someone with ADHD, I already struggle getting motivated to be productive if I don't find the task at hand interesting enough. So the idea of working on a job I find boring doesn't sit well with me.
Yeah I think boring is actually the wrong word here. 'mundane' or 'not-flashy' or 'low prestige' might be better. Looking at the video, I don't think it's the job actually being boring that is the important thing, but jobs that are perceived to be boring tend to have better workplace conditions and less rat-race. The job itself has to be reasonably engaging ofc.
Hah, I've heard the same from a friend with ADHD. He always has to attend meeting that bore him out of his mind, and aren't even related to his specific role, so he keeps his mind busy by playing video games, as he works remotely. He would still rather not have those meetings (and then not game) over having them.
I'm pretty low on the spectrum when it comes to ADHD. It's really really bad. I remember just sitting in school for years not listening to a single word any teacher ever said. Boredom is so fucking mental painful Jesus. So I did as many extra curriculars as possible. Constantly feeling my day up all throughout middle school to college. Afterwards I did allot of temp work which means filling in and answering one or two phone calls a day for eight hours 40 hours a week. I would read and look up and watch everything I wanted and when I went home I was bored bc I had nothing to entertain myself with. It was mental painful Then I got a middle management job at a high in restaurant/alcohol store I had to do everything to know everything on both bars the retail store and I had to do administrative task and manage 20 people walk 20,0000 steps a day and commute to the city. All while reporting to verbal abusive and sometimes idiotic disorganized manager. And I didn't have weekends off so I was missing so many important events. Anyways I got so burnt out. I was only making 55,000 for a job I should have been making at the least 80,000 (this is in San Fran wages are higher). Fucking hated that shit started to burn out and stop even trying.i let you l everyone walk So over me the whole time and I started So I got fired lol. I went on unemployment for a year. And I learned how to entertain myself the whole day. I got a boring job that pays me $120 less a month then the stressful job and I live a block from my apartment. So worth it. I've never been happier. I'm happy I had a year of to learn how to sustain and entertain myself and I also got on Wellbutrin and Adderall so things can always change
I've worked in an ER for 4 years. I also have a bad case of adhd. I ran nonstop for 12 hrs straight, 3 days in a row and even when I was at my absolute mind boggling busiest, I was still bored. Found an easier more boring job and I feel the exact same except more rested. I've since learned that I'm gonna be bored no matter what I do in life. Moral of the story, adhd is ass.
When I was taking a work literacy course in high school, we filled out a questionnaire for our “dream job”. I was surprised to see questions like: “does your work take place primarily inside or outside?”, “Does your dream job give you access to windows?”, “Do you interact with people irl or over technology?” My favorite was “what does your dream job primarily focus on: people, animals, places, things, or abstract thought?” I think “dream job” is very titular based and not “what does my day in and day out look like and will that make me happy?”
Sign up to Morning Brew for a totally free selection of high quality business, finance and general interest articles delivered direct to your inbox every morning - morningbrewdaily.com/howmoneyworks
My dream job were boring from the start.
That's what I love to do!
In fact, any job can be boring. The more you understand, the more boring it becomes.
That is the truth! Any job can get boring!
Never separate jobs, as they can all be complicated. The complexity makes it boring.
Therefore, it is not worth dividing the work into stylish and the like.
Really not worth it!
That is the truth!
This is what, makes work for work!
I’m honestly surprised that a daily email newsletter is being advertised in 2022. Given I basically only use my email for 2 factor authentication.
@@TheBen9701 why aren't you using something more secure
I hope being a RUclipsr is boring enough for you
I would love for some physical labor equivalent perspective to be brought to this topic. I'm in Vegas and I work at a semi truck dealership as a shop foreman. I can tell you I love what I do but I very much work every day of my life... and honestly I couldn't see myself anywhere else at the age of 26
I can say from experience, working a boring job with pleasant staff and management is the best thing ever for your mental health.
Yeeeees! My friends are all so baffled that I've worked the same job for years. But I have a manager I like, my officemates are all so pleasant and nice, the company culture is relaxed and non-hierarchical. I am never contacted outside of office hours. My manager actually seems embarrassed to ask me to do the rare once in 6 months overtime. And I get paid handsomely for overtime and holidays. I'm fine with my boring job that treats me well and lets me live the rest of my life, thank you very much.
No for everyone. I get depressed knowing my work is having no impact.
@@RUclipsuser1aa boring work can have an impact, and exciting work can have no impact
@@AllTheArtsy May I ask what do you do?
It really is, you don't essentially take work home with you, there's really no stress when you take time off, you're not constantly stressed you're going to lose your dream job, cause its just a job & there is alot of peace that comes with it just being a job
“Doing what you love” changes when you add the pressure of deadlines, a boss and people you don’t want to talk to lol
Couldn’t have said it better myself
Thats no longer what you love.
What I love includes not having a boss and not having high pressure deadlines.
Yea basically its passion till it becomes a job. Then it's a job. By having a boring job you can spend a lot of time on other important things
@@BeefIngot it could very well still be what they love doing. Outside pressure can either be encouraging, or it can be crushing. A small and tolerable level of stress is what makes things meaningful. It just comes down to every individual situation.
@@haroombe123 depends on the job. Not all boring jobs pay well or offer greate life balance.
I would say that most jobs that ppl dread are low paid and on long hours...
The older I get, the more I realize how limited my emotional energy really is. My family deserves that energy, NOT my employer.
This!! 🙌🏻🙌🏻
Wish I woudl get that job
Totally agree
yeah. Like I'm considering a job and I look at the salary they offer me.... it's the most ever offered to me and very well paid (though taxes takes a big cut and it still isn't enough to be able to afford a mortgage coz housing prices here are ridiculous).... but I'm like yeah I don't know bout that.... coz considering what they ask it's actually kind of low paid. It is a 9-6 job, but I'll have to travel 3-4 hours a day and I also have to do half a study on the side, coz 'quality improvement' as they call it.. yeah don't know bout that, the points I have to get for it doesn't look like quality improvement to me; more like community service. Not to mention all the boring fucking meetings OUTSIDE work time that could have easily been put in a fucking email. So all wrapped up I'd be working 60-70 hours a week... that's not a job, that's a fucking career.
Families love free emotional energy!
Boring jobs are only good if you get paid well. If you’re not making that much money, that boring job can be absolutely soul-crushing and you will feel like your life is slowly rotting away because you don’t make enough money to do anything fun while saving money too
Hey we don’t need to get so personal now…. I resemble that lol
Word
I have a boring job and I had an extremely bad life before that. I was disease, starving, and basically tortured. People need to experience more bad things to appreciate their lives more. People in this situation arent really calibrated to know between a good life a bad life. This why some spoil rich kids disgruntled and complained about the smallest things. I am also unbelievably terrified that my life will end up in the same position as before. I know my life can be a billion times worse than it is today and I am thankful I have food in my belly, a roof over my head, good health, and decent people around me.
@@alexlilano1931 where are you from?
@@m.houdeib United States. I just came from a bad family and escaped when I hit 18 and needed to be around a lot a bad people for a while. The thing that got me through it is God. I legit would had ended myself multiple of times if he I didnt believe.
I’ve always had shitty jobs. I got a “boring” office job a little over a month ago and it was the best thing that could have ever happened to me. I’m making more than ever, I have almost zero stress at work, my boss is wonderful, my coworkers are a joy, and the work, while tedious, is very easy. I’ve also had more energy to do workouts after work and have already lost a few pounds. This honestly IS my dream job. Because it’s helping me live a better life.
What job do you have?
Guys you can't keep posting those kind of comments without telling us what your job is
Yeah, whats your job?
I had the literal exact opposite experience. I had a salaried job at a big bank working admin on a small team, the management was terrible and the pressure was insane. Previously I worked in another office for a small company and while the office culture was good for the most part, they were in financial trouble. Office jobs are not all made equal
Brynn you can't not tell us your job!? We NEED that information! 😭
My motto has always been "instead of planning for a vacation, create a lifestyle you don't need to take a vacation from". Helped me decide to pick low stress jobs most of my life, and I've noticed for me things have been phenomenally better than for most of my friends
What jobs have you done? I really want a stress-free job!
Could you give us an example
-Seth Godin
This, 100% this. Leave the city, because that's the opposite of a vacation, and relocate to refuge from insanity that is the countryside. Get a stable, boring job. Enjoy the positive interactions and challenges of manageable scale at work. Come home and enjoy your free time. Revel in the ability to go outside and find nature instead of a concrete hellscape. Realize that everyone grinding out 50 hour weeks in the city will never be as rich as you no matter how much money they make.
Because of Covid I now WFH (office has no space for me anymore). I make 80% what I could if I was job hopping, but due to seniority I work, in reality, limited hours. I work out when I want, mow the lawn when I want, etc. WFH IT jobs are a cheat code to life.
I'm a musician. The best job I ever had was working customer service for a museum, I just sat there with my friend and we took two hour lunch breaks and no one noticed and my brain was not fried at the end of the day - plenty of time for music and socializing. Now I'm a tenured professor of music at a prestigious university, and I'm overworked, stressed out, and at the end of the day, I just want to go home and watch RUclips videos like this one.
I was a janator at a gym during highschool and college and worked 4-5 hours a day in the evening just kinda hanging out and moping the floors, doing the windows. Aftere we closed at 10pm, I got in a free 20 min workout, a free shower and sauna in the pool. At 11pm I walked 2 mins down the block to home. Best job ever though little pay ($7.50 an hour back in 2015 in NY). Now I work in a call center in finance as a stock broker placing trades for people. I thought it will be fun because I really loved the stock market when I was younger but after in 2021 getting this job, the dam computer phone won't stop ringing for 14 hours straight! Ya can't stop it after one client hangs up 2 secconds the next one comes in...... Atleast we get health insurance on this one....
Did the extra income not make up for the fact it's more stressful?
@@TheMrplayitsafeNot past a certain amount. It ends up adding stress.
4:45 Looks like the tip was not taken for career choices. “Doing what you love for work, you wont love it forever” i was a music artist and audio engineer once I opened up a studio, i began hating it. The artists that had money to pay for services were mostly terrible, the artists that were great to work with and really talented couldn’t afford the studio time. I got out while I was still young. Now Im in IT. I can still love music and be stressed, annoyed, or tired of it.
Thanks for sharing this. I thought that I was the only one with that sort of experience.
As a retired support helper, I’d say the best job right now is working from home for an investment manager who hires you to handle records. I make over $390k a year. You just need the right connections and contacts to land a job that could change your life and your family’s future
Wow, this is amazing! You're absolutely right it's all about having the right connections to find a good job. Honestly, I've been looking for a job like this for a while now.
Please, I’d love more info on this! Some of my friends have been talking about it, and working remotely for an investment firm is exactly what I want! I’m currently jobless, so any help with the right information would be greatly appreciated I’m a great fit for this type of job. please help how can i apply.
$390k yearly wow , please how do i apply also ???
To apply for a role like this, you’ll need strong communication skills, especially the ability to guide and convince clients about the best investment options. You don’t necessarily need extensive knowledge upfront, as you’ll receive guidance on working with clients. Experience in reading and writing financial reports is also important. For opportunities, reach out to Graciela Lynne Schriewer online, who helps people connect with investment firms.
Thank you so much! I just looked her up online, found her website, and contacted her through it. She seemed very legitimate, and I sent an email i found on her page.
My daughter, at about 12-13 years old had been doing artwork, both digital and traditional, as a passion for most of her life to that point, and very well i would add. We talked about possible career choices later on, so she can focus on things now to help her later with that career. We suggested art or design since she loves doing it... she told us she absolutely does not want to do anything related to art as a career, because its what she loves to do, and doing it for work would make her hate it... kid really has life figured out.
Your daughter is literally me 15+ years ago. My parents also told me to "use my drawing talent" but I had the feeling that being forced to do as told on a deadline would just make me hate drawing.
Nowadays I'm, after a few weird excursions, ended up doing QA and Test Automation, as well as UI/UX on the side. Luckily I find that very fun as well, though I initially underestimated just how much you need to understand about something to properly test it. Can't know if something is broken if you don't know how it's supposed to work in the first place :)
WOW!!!
@@Rettomus Yeah, one of my friends had gone to art school(racked up the wonderful student loans), loved doing art... he now owns a FedEx delivery area and is quite happy...
Try engineering or chemist. Cool fields with good time off that can help with art as a hobby.
Yeah. That's excactly what I was thinking 10 years ago when I was 16. I am a car guy and love working with cars but I didn't want to be a mechanic. I feared that I would lose the passoin towards cars if I would work with them 40 hours a week. Now I work a boring office job and wrench cars during the weekends. 😁 I have no idea how I managed to come up with a logic like this back then but I'm happy I did.
Working in a job “everyone would love to have” or in a company that is “changing the world” is the corporate equivalent of “being paid in exposure”
“Everyone who has a 9-5 is a sellout. The only free people in America are the homeless or on welfare.” -Jeff Musk Buffett Zuckergates
Only reason I’m going to the risk div of a bulge bracket next month is for the name on my resume. Hoping to grind it out for a while esp while Im juggling law school at night since the office is just a short walk from campus. No need to be sexy, just want lots of cash with as minimal work as possible lmfao.
With that mindset I guess being good looking would get you paid more. It will definitely help.
exactly, you're being paid to get a gold star on your CV - the pay-off comes later
@Selena Reagan REALLY!!! wow - I must give you all my money to run off with
I have a boring job and I absolutely love it. My bosses are so lenient. No one wants to apply for this job because it’s either too boring or overwhelming. They can’t keep people. So they treat us so we won’t leave
And what exactly is that job? Or is it too good of a secret?
@@ExNihiloComesNothing guess I did leave that part out. Haha. A water plant operator.
@@Loosie_fur Nice! A good friend of mine works in water treatment and its largely the same.
@@ExNihiloComesNothing high liability. Hard at the beginning. Bit of chemistry, bit of algebra. But once you understand it and how it all works together the easier it gets. The schedule is probably the best part. 3, 12 hour days one week and 4, 12 hour days the next. Mostly sit down job. And you get to use a laboratory! No degree necessary.
@@Loosie_fur mind if I ask what the pay is like and what state? Also is it shift work where there's nights involved or days only?
My job is super boring and I love it. I work in a small warehouse doing pick and pack, returns and booking in stock. My boss is super lovely. His says that all we do is put stuff in a box and send it out the door your home life is more important.
Are peek time is October to December so it can get super busy but the rest of year I spend a lot of time on my phone just waiting for orders to drop on my screen. Best job in the world!
I liked this when I was young. But when you get older you want some satisfaction from what you're doing.
Have a boring job but an exciting hobby - that's true happiness.
or both
what about both ?
True happiness is doing a passion as a living, and after your day to be able to pursue other passions.
I'm in medschool, and oh boy it's the best life (for me) . it's such fulfillment to enjoy be able to enjoy most of your awake time, for most of your life. And when I have freetime, i do other passions and hobbies: gaming, music, working out, piano etc.
Medicine is on top of being fascinating and so easy to fall in love with, it's actually useful knowledge. (ex: theorical physics, also fascinating, but it's really abstract).
And to know it will get even better as you graduate: good pay, social and financial status, and most importantly a sense of meaning in life (and duty): being able to make good things and help people and be rewarded for that. Knowing people count on you when you wake up.
Sounds really naive, but when money and passion are no longer a concern, a sense of purpose in life is important fulfillment if not the most important.
But the hard reality is only a few privilege get to spend their day doing their passion, and in their free time other passions. That's why such fields are highly competitive, everyone wants that, not only for money, but because the more important reasons previously mentioned.
@@WJYN7435 Too many underachievers today.
@@AFuller2020 It depends on your definition of underachiever, achievement can be on any area including the things that will not really much at the end of your life
I work a desk job for the government. I literally spend all day watching RUclips and processing a few documents. 10/10 I absolutely love my job
I have a desk job with the federal government. We work at home 4 days a week, with 1 day a week in the office. The work might be "boring," but working at home is awesome. I can sleep in, and not have to worry about dressing up nice and commuting. And on days when I don't have much work to do, I can get away with taking two hour lunches, or doing the laundry.
What field do you work in?
@@digitalmaijiin6236 I don't want to disclose the specific federal agency I work for, but I can tell you that I work in a finance position. The job requires a bachelor's degree in accounting. We don't deal with the public, we basically work by ourselves, with an occasional team meeting. That's why work at home works great for us. Whether we sit by ourselves in our cubicle in the office, or stay at home, it doesn't matter, it has no impact on our work.
Just retired from the military (still on terminal leave). Our civilian force was 90% reason why I retired. Breaking up with the department of defense was the best decision I could have ever made for my mental health.
This would kill me. I still love RUclips though
Just wanted to note that there is actually a phenomenon called "bore out" (caused by too much boredom at work) with the same effects on health as a burn out. So working a repetitive job that feels like it's producing no value has risks too. However, working a boring job doesn't automatically mean that your work doesn't produce value and is not appreciated, so I think it's important to differentiate between "boring" jobs and "soul sucking depressing" jobs and to keep those in mind while searching for a job.
Exactly! Everybody praising boring jobs in the comments really surprised me because you can absolutely “bore out”!
I’d make a suggestion that I use personally, just because I have a boring job in an exciting company. But, I take jobs that I can grow out of. The keyword is grow. I’m young tho’ I guess the mindset is different. If you can’t grow in your field, you’ve potential grown out of what it provides you. You’ve learned how to deal with different kinds of management & employees, a certain work load, you got bored and the job doesn’t interest you anymore, even to where you don’t wanna rely on the stability of it. I always suggest moving with the company. If it has a branch on the opposite side of the world, do the boring job in an exciting part of the world. There’s a lot of solutions to boring out without having to switch a job. A lot of people just don’t see the possibility. That’s only if you actually like your job to at least use as it as a means to an end.
This is when you find a hobby you enjoy so you put in your 9-5 then you have time and money to do something you enjoy doing.
Yes, love this. Im starting a boring job at my dad's company that I'm actually very excited for due to the decent pay and good company culture. What helps make it not meaningless is a) it's for my family, continuing what my dad has built, personal value in it for me and b) it's a flour mill, so it's essential food that everyone in the country needs.
After pursuing passion in my career in my 20s that burn me out, I've revalued what a career means. Excited to try out a more grown up approach to work with more reasonable expectations of fulfillment.
I have a boring repetetive job and it pay a lot😅
But to stay sane i mix the routine and it give me a chance to review if im doing a worse or better
I just retired from being an industrial electrician. I didn't work until the machines broke or were not required. When the machines were not running I was on overtime doing maintenance to avoid breakdowns. The breakdown were high pressure but generally fixed quickly. In between, I read, studied, learned keyboard, practice my golf swing, slept and anything else I could come up with. What a life! And it paid quite well! Trades is where it's at.
Very interesting input. Thanks.
What was you’re position?
@@thegamingfox2533 Generally prone, in industry downtime can cost tens of thousands per minute. Great idea to have me busy all the time but if I get a call and it takes an extra five minutes to get there no one is happy. Industrial electrician, I mainly work on the computers, do repairs as needed, I try to think ahead and replace before repair is needed. Lots of people seem to have issue with that. Generally they recoup my years wages every day. Millwritht is good but can be heavy, electrical can be extremely dangerous, you need to be aware and careful, lots of other trades but being the on call person is where the loafing comes in.
That sounds amazing lucky
Superb life, that is what a job should be !!!! You can tap yourself on the shoulder.
"People don't quit jobs. They quit managers." That was an excellent line, and it rings so true for me.
So true! That's why I quit my last job and just retired at 52 and moved to Thailand.
okay...
Teachers who get tired of kids and parents.
People in dangerous/unhealthy jobs.
There are jobs that people definitely quit, even if their manager is good.
A manager I hated quit. I loved it and I did not join him.
Nope. I've quit jobs because of hours, salary and benefits.
I actually loved my manager at the job I quit. But the company basically shit on our entire department while taking our work and praising the marketing department for the work that WE did.
I want to send this video to every young person I know. I got my “dream job” and it ate me alive. The hours were horrendous and constantly on weekends. Getting out and going to a boring job was the best thing I ever did. Great vid!
What is your read dream?
can't agree more
Dream jobs are demanding. That comes with the territory. You think Cristiano Ronaldo got to where he is by working only 9 to 5 five days a week and weekends off? He worked his tail off.
A dream job shouldn't feel like a job
@@nimanixo Dream jobs are like dreams- then you wake up. There is no such thing as a dream job. A job is your effort to support others' dreams; conversely, if you are endeavoring to realize your own dream, that isn't a job, it is a quest.
Remember, folks, always stay in a job where you're slightly over-qualified, not the other way around. That way, your company will feel like they really have something valuable in you, and you won't constantly feel the need to over-exert just to meet expectations.
Another tip is to make sure to not work to your full capabilities everyday. If you give 50% everyday then management will praise you for giving 75%, but if you give 100% everyday and then start giving 75% due to stress and burn out you're on the chopping block for under-performing.
It's all about the expectation you create.@@ambiarock590
You should never feel over qualified or under qualified at your job. You should be qualified for your job. Being over qualified has just as many frustrations and struggles as being under qualified. This is not good advice.
Well... I couldn't get a job I applied for because I was told I am overqualified, but they were impressed with how I did during the interview. lol any suggestions? 😂 😅
@@tomassarapas302 True, because when you are become overqualified your income must grow too, and most companies dont do this.
Agree to an extent, although I think the term boring is being used loosely…. When your job is so boring/repetitive and mind numbing that all you do is the same simple task over and over and over again when you’re busy, and when you’re quiet you just twiddle your thumbs and stare at the seconds ticking by on the clock…. Makes the day seem like it never ends and it can make you feel incredibly lazy and unsatisfied. The less you do, the less you want to do, a different sort of burned out…. The brain need stimulation, there is a balance to strike
Ify I had a few Ware house jobs and worked at a fast pace and got stuff done a lot faster than everyone and time was still going by super slow. And even if I got everything done very quick it would be just more and more shit to do like it never ended I was never able to pull out my phone or walk around for 10 mins.
"You probably won't love it forever." I love fixing guns. After a couple years of doing it for a major police agency, it was tedious and mundane. So then I opened my own business. And I dealt with customer complaints, unrealistic expectations, supply chain delays, legislative changes and the fact that gun owners are just plain cheap. I was doing my dream job and it was awful. So I got a boring job working as a security guard and I'm actually a lot happier.
This is truly a great point & story. Thanks for elaborating
Sometimes it’s better to do something you already are bored by than to ruin your passion by making it work.
@@LEFT4BASS Those are true words of wisdom to live by.
I use to work security for a middle school. The majority of the time I would literally sit on a chair in the middle of a hallway doing nothing or just making sure kids were heading to class. The hallway I patrolled was usually always quiet since I was very strict with the kids so they wouldn’t mess with me! Kids & even staff would tell me how boring my job was since like I said earlier I did nothing for the most part of the job, but I didn’t mind at all! Not to mention that the school I worked for offered good benefits. Payed vacation, sick days & holidays! It really wasn’t that bad at all!
Very interesting. Thank you for sharing! Especially since I used to have a lot of guns, and you're right I'm kind of cheap. 😄.
I think something that goes unsaid is that "boring work" carries a considerable mental toll on the person. Spending 37-40 hours per week doing mind-numbing tasks with no end in sight (depending on how you define boring) can honestly make some people depressed.
Hey, I'd still take that boring work since my life is already boring.
i agree, if I am not mentally stimukated im going to die, I have a new job now and I make 150 calls a days and it rough
Not working on your skills & being more & more outdated also takes a mental toll... And I wouldn't consider that stable at all...
Really? Want to try being responsible for flights safety in a shift rotation system? I would pay for boring job near home (commuting is a bitch).
Exacccctly. I quit a job doing payroll for a demolition company. Pay was nice but everyday around 2pm my eyes would glaze over and I eventually fell into a depression from feeling like my life was pointless.
Wow, 58-year-old here and I can totally agree with you. I'm a data analyst and have been since I graduated from college around the time of the dinasoure, got a boring job, rode the tech wave, did not EVER want to be a C-suite person, socked my money away in stocks, real estate, and 401k, had a family, worked only 40 hours a week, took cool vacations and now I'm retiring early super happy and fulfilled. My job was just that, a job. My life was what I made of it.
How much you make? I think that’s a path I would like is something in data but in tech
I've been busting my ass for months to be a data analyst, thanks for making me a bit more excited about it
Debbieee.. you are the best person i could get my answer from... Why is everyone crying in the last 12 months that there is a new field called data analysis and it's the next big opportunity... All universities have started courses on it in some format or other ?
You been one for so long already!!
🌸
@@thelayman6189 Ya, it cracks me up when I see the "new" field of "big data" 🤣Data has always been collected and it was always the job of a data analyst to report on that data. But back in my day they called us "Report writers" because that is what a data analyst produce.
I'm slowing down now so this year I'll make only about $120k
It's sad how difficult things have become in the present generation. I was wondering how to utilise some money I had. I used some of it for e-commerce business, but that sank. I'm thinking of how to use what's left to invest, but I don't really know which way to go.
I understand how you feel. It's a little bit difficult to navigate things these days. You don't wanna lose whatever is left. I may suggest that you find a financial advisor who could give you thorough advice on how to go if you want to go the investment route. Also, the fact your business failed doesn't mean you should give up.
That's right. I have tried many failed businesses and it's just a step further. Don't despair. But to add, if you do decide to use a financial advisor, it's best you use someone who understands your special needs and can work with you. I learnt this from experience before finally finding one I can stick with. Now I make six figures from my investments alone, and even more from my businesses.
Thank you for the advice. When you say financial advisor, are you talking about hedge funds? And how do I get in touch with one?
REBECCA NASSAR DUNNE is her name. She is regarded as a genius in her area and works for Equity Services inc. She’s quite known in her field, look-her up.
I just googled her and I'm really impressed with her credentials; I reached out to her since I need all the assistance I can get. I just scheduled a caII.
The main goal is to have time to take care of myself, having peace of mind and earning enough so I can have my basic needs covered. The older you get, the less you care about status. You just wanna be left in peace, enjoy a hobby, be with friends and don't have to deal with toxic people on a daily basis.
TRUTH!!
love this comment mate
The real ambition, non of this hustle stuff. These rich people are miserable. I'm happy to be well off and chill af, that's real wealth.
Who says you have to be older to want that?
This comment is soothing, truly a breath of fresh air
10000% agreed with this entire video. I'm a graphic designer and used to work in Fashion/Entertainment. My work was on some really major platforms which was exciting in the moment, but looking back, it wasn't worth all of the blood sweat and tears. Now I work in Real Estate/Tech for a lesser known company. Not only is the money way better, but the job is also way easier. I work significantly less hours, have a more than ideal work life balance, and I have so much extra time to breathe and do what I want from any location and I am never stressed. The work itself is not terribly creative and there isn't that much creative freedom but I learned the hard way that you should never look to a job to get creative fulfillment. Your full-time job should serve as a "part-time" job in the grand scheme, and living your life should be your full-time job.
Well said.
Very well said !
"Your full-time job should serve as a "part-time" job in the grand scheme, and living your life should be your full-time job."
Now that's a pretty memorable last line, ones corporate overlords would hate , and I one that I love. Very well said!
Wow!!
Thank you Sarah! This idea is eye-opening to a fresher like me.
As someone who moved from a "interesting" to a boring job I cannot agree more, now having work life balance, absolutely no drama in my usual day and a much higher paid job, not bad in my book
Yup, made a similar move a year ago. Especially when starting a family this is helpful. I have no more work travel for a couple of days, better insurances and 20% increase in pay for less working hours and a lot less stress. More time for the family and hobbies and even develop a side hustle if I wanted to
@@giantpedro agreed, my side hustle has benefitted greatly from the change
Do you mind mentioning what your role was and is now?
@@wokeclub1844 it was from a KAM role to a risk engineer position in an insurance company on paper it was a lower position
I can totally agree. Less stress, more life balance, more time for side hustle.
This is fantastic advice. I've always worked for companies nobody has ever heard of in roles that sound extremely boring (internal comms). Yet, I've always had great pay, good benefits, job stability and the jobs are rarely stressful. I've been offered promotions and turned them down because I don't want to introduce unnecessary stress into my work. I'm happy where I am even if I am overqualified for the position. Some people put me down for having a lack of drive, but I know what makes me happy. I would rather know more than I need to know and be a resource than be stressed constantly trying to figure out new things. This video was almost therapeutic for me to watch, haha.
I have a boring job and I would say when you calculate the amount of time and stress I input I feel extremely overpaid for what I do and actually feel discouraged to pursue more challenging jobs because the salary premium is no longer worth it. Boring jobs allow me to allocate time to myself. I read a lot of books during my downtime which helps me improve myself. I’m literally feeling like I’m in semi retirement mode.
Perfect Equilibrium.
Whats your job?
@@younge2386 yeah what's the job
Yeah whats your job
It's a secret job maybe he sells coke
I’m an Sr. IT Auditor for a large bank, I can honestly say I never nor hear any child wanting to be an auditor when they grow; especially throughout my entire life and college career. Add it all up, it’s quite easily the best paying profession in terms of how much effort I put into for the amount I make. I may only actually put in 20 hours of work on average and 40 hours 2 months out of the year. And I get paid six figures, to then focus on my other side ventures outside of work. Kids it’s economics 101 pick a profession that has less supply and high demand and people will pay and spoil you.
Edit: wow... didn't think my comment would blow up this much. I'll try to answer everyone's questions as best. Thanks again. FYI: I did start at the Big 4 accounting firms, so that definitely did help in case was wondering.
How to become one then?
I thought front end devs had it easy for their pay. How did you become an IT Auditor?
thats why i went into accounting. just dont go to big 4 kids
@@RAFAELFALA Software engineers in general do. I work from home, my job takes maybe 10 hours a week and pays around $150k. Just stay away from FAANG, they may pay you better but they'll work you like a dog.
@@elmateo77 10hrs a week is crazy. Which industry do you work on?
I love my boring job. I’m a nurse and I work from home reviewing insurance claims. I remember I used to feel bad because all these nurses were going for their masters as a nurse practitioner. They would brag about it and the pay they would get. Fast forward 10 yrs later and many of them are burned out, stressed and want out. I get my time off when I want it, log off when I’m done and the company I work for is great and laid back. I love that you did a video on this. Nothing wrong with having a boring job.
200% agree with you: as nurse working in hospital, i have never seen so much so much drama,complaints and bow to superiors (not even in the army there is such level of obedience).
Totally would love that kind of job. I worked in a hospital at the bedside for 14 years and was more than done with it when I quit.
That's awesome what company
@@Politegirl686 I’m with Centers of Medicare and Medicaid.
How did you get into that job?!
From my experience, there are two ways to be happy with your job.
- easy and boring BUT your life outside the job is great. Family, friends, community etc
- If you don’t have a life filled with love then then your job is your life. So a more fulfilling and passionate job is required
In the end it’s all about balance. Your job takes up half your life while the other half is taken up by having a life. So they gotta balance eachother out
I just went from an exciting job to a boring job this month and not only do I get paid more but the job is so chill that I am still getting use to it. I was told to RELAX so many times from my co workers and I didn’t realize I was going over and beyond and on edge afraid I wasn’t being “productive”. Two weeks in and I have finally chilled out lol. I was so use to being yelled at for being too slow, having deadlines to meet, the fast paced environment and being verbally abused that with my new job I seemed unhinged. It’s been a whirlpool of emotions and crazily I was thinking of staying long term here. I felt bad that I liked it here because it’s a 180 spin on what I was doing before. Since I’m not doing a world changing job anymore I felt useless for a while but I’ve been happier here. I have more time for myself and doing things I love. I’ve noticed I smile more and started joking around again. 😁
I really like your comment and that you found something that makes you happy, but I have to mention that a 360 degree spin would end up the same place where you started, I hope this is not the case ;)
180° turn not a 360° spin (which would put you the exact position you began in).
My bad meant 180 spin lol thanks!
What's the boring job? What's the role?
what job did you have before?
I'm a chemical engineer and I worked a boring job in office for a short time and then voluntarily changed to an exciting job that basically involved lots of travel, constant high attention work with highly toxic and explosive chemicals (minor error could lead to death or serious injuries). In the start I really enjoyed it however after five years and starting a family I noticed that I have a terrible mental fatigue, constant anxiety and stress related tremor. Recently I left and started a boring job, an advice I always give when someone tells me they need more excitement...no, no you don't
Great seeing a reply from a fellow engineer. Was pondering about taking on a more exciting opportunity from being in a good paying, boring job but this has got me really thinking💯
Somebody has to do the jobs that actually matter though, you know the jobs that create stress, anxiety...we can see the effects on society of people running away from fields that require detail, responsibility, and sacrifice but make the world a better place. Eventually without people building, growing food, and managing our complex systems everybody will be subject to crippling stress and anxiety of hunger, violence, and crumbling infrastructure. The robots aren't ready yet.
That’s good you have that experience though I’m sure there’s a “boring desk job” that pays well and requires some chemical engineering experience.
dang... Thanks for your input this actually got me thinkin
If they need more excitement In Their life, try a dog 😂
I caught the subtle comment about you now being a full time youtuber. Congrats!
Thank you :)
@@HowMoneyWorks love you bro.
@@HowMoneyWorks Seriously, congrats. Great channel :)
@@HowMoneyWorks ayy congrats! I heard you were in banking, must be good to get out of there. But then, it's usually a boring job so maybe you liked it.
@@Bakaboomb Hah. Banking was anything but boring. Super stressful and I'm glad I left
Being bored at work 8 hours a day sounds more like torture to me. Time passes insanely slowly and you are mentally drained when you come home. I guess it really depends what kind of person you are.
Completely agree. It is beyond mentally draining and depressing.
Boring job = low stress/low pressure job, so you can have more time and energy to do your hobby or side hustle that you enjoy. Thanks for the insight👍🏻
Exactly. We shouldn't be spending all our time and emergy on just our job
I've had jobs that have made me want to staple my forehead out of bordum.. too much of a good thing ya know
I agree. I've never bought into the idea that work should be your "passion". A job should be just something that brings in money while you spend your time on better stuff.
A boring job that pays well enough to live and gives me time to do fun stuff with my free time is all I need.
Of course, most jobs don't pay a living wage, which is where the problem lies.
Had minimum wage kept up with productivity (due to advancing knowledge and technology), it would be ~$25/hr right now. All jobs can and need to pay a living wage right now
@@ambiarock590couldn't agree more.
If your job is your passion you won. If your job is boring but not bad, you didn't win but didn't lose either.
My experience was the opposite. All the adventure in my life was paid for by my employers, and what adventures they were! I understand that a lot of people want jobs that are predictable and unskilled or semiskilled, but nothing is as satisfying as being a hero.
@@flagmichaeli feel that.
I wholeheartedly agree! Work with what you love and soon you will start to hate it. My job policy is money in the pocket and an environment that doesn't make you crazy or depressive.
@NorthOfWindsor that’s true, companies prey on people’s passions. Especially in the gamer world and entertainment industry in general.
@@jokerpilled2535 where did I see you before? Kings and Generals?
@NorthOfWindsor I agree, boring jobs are not meant for people who value other things in life than money. I’m willing to take a pay cut if I can at least have freedom to work as I please and be around people with similar interests/beliefs as me. Only thing I won’t tolerate is abusive management or disrespectful co-workers.
@NorthOfWindsor I love your name.
I think some folks are getting the wrong message here. A boring job does not mean you are lazy or work at some kind of low level position. A boring job should mean working hard (not working excessive hours, but working hard when you are there). A boring job is just a "regular" job vs. trying to find a job where you get paid for doing a hobby. Lastly, no matter how much you like something, it will become a job if you are doing it for a job.
"Managers will think to themselves that straight-up verbal abuse is really just a heated disagreement amongst peers who are too passionate about what they do." So true, I have seen this so many times. Every manager I have had in fact. This attitude seems to be very common, and contributes to a lot of the social problems we see.
Also, the simple difference between management being salaried and workers being hourly. People who always go home after 8 hours rarely become middle managers - and because managers are okay with long hours, they tend to see people who aren't as lazy. And treat them "accordingly".
@@Grizabeebles q
Oh I agree, have seen it many times. What the ones in an upper position think is an environment where people can "freely speak their minds", becomes an environment where the ones in the lower positions feel bullied and disrespected.
@@adrianahlz1895 -- I hear that. Because managers have the power to retaliate and hourly staff don't, hourlies are going to always self-censor, meanwhile managers will turn their filters off and act like total jerks.
Nah, I got verbal abuse from one dude who just screamed at everyone (wife, customers) and more verbal abuse from another guy who probably had imposter syndrome and short guy insecurity and eventually got 7/8 experienced employees to leave the group. They were both just dicks.
Doing something that feels unfulfilling for 40 hours a week is not an aspiration. A boring job is only good if it ridiculously highly paid so you can work less hours a week to have more time to do what you like.
True!
Glad someone said it lol
Yeah it needs to be sufficiently bearable
I think the fine line is not hating your job. If you hate your job there is nothing that can make up for that. However, if your job is bearable but just boring, that isn't nearly as bad. Perhaps boring is not the best word to be using...maybe 'mundane' is a better word. I think to many people want to define their existence by what they do to earn money. There is nothing wrong with mundane work because someone needs to do it for the world to continue to function.
How do you define ridiculously high paid
I’m a flight attendant and LOVE planes, but this “dream job” gets incredibly tiring and passengers constantly push my already low bar in humanity
I was a flight attendant for 10 years. Only thing I miss is the flexibility and longer amounts of time off. It really can be a rough job!
I always wanted to work as a flight crew ever since I started traveling on planes.. guess it's not all exciting
@@pikachu-zt9fq Don't get me wrong, it's a nice job and I like it, but it's not for everyone. the amount of endurance and mental strength needed is MASSIVE
@@MandoMonge okay, just like jobs where you are exposed to "entitled" customers and you need to bear with them nevertheless
I’m a flight attendant too and agree:) it’s tough
*I think the retirement crisis will get even worse. A lot of people can't save because of low paying jobs, inflation, an insane rental rates. And now that home ownership is out of reach for middle class Americans, I was once homeless, thank God I was able to make $279k in forex bought my first house last week*
Congratulations you are really doing well , my finance are really in mess right now and great tip will really go along way in shaping my life too im open for idea
Hey sorry for late response I apparently used the FIRE movement to put my finances in shape you can research more about it and invested in Stocks and forex with the aid an investment enthusiasts(Alvarez Harry Flectcher)
Wow 😲I know this Man mentioned here . Alvarez Harry is really good with and on his job. He's helped a couple of families and individuals' finances, I'm huge beneficiary of his platform too
You don't have to be surprised, his successful story is every where. so many people have recommended highly about him, I'm also beneficiary of his platform from Brisbane Australia 🇦🇺@@RalphLewis-j4q
Money invested is far better than money saved, when you invest it gives you an opportunity to increase your financial worth
I worked in an industry I loved for 15 years, and it was soils destroying - the culture was toxic, the management was narcissistic, I was miserable and very broke. Now I have a “boring” admin job at a consulting firm, and I love it - I make enough money to not struggle, my workplace is largely drama free and pleasant, my good attitude is appreciated, and at the end of the day, I go home and live my real life and leave my work at work. I thought a desk job would kill my soul, and I was so wrong.
My god same! I worked in apparels purely. Loved running around and being on my feet. But then I shifted to tech. People are smart, friendly and innovative. Job is hectic at times and desk job but best decision ever!
I work as an accountant, about 4 years into industry. Earlier this year, after a few years in one company, I changed to a new job to expand to a higher level role. With that change came a 50% raise. My new job (and my old job) were boring. But I actually enjoy it, because I can zone in, play some music, do the work, and sign off. Also crucially, my new job is fully remote and my schedule is highly flexible. Boring jobs are underrated.
Omg I love that. I love studying finance/business/real estate if I could do that all day in a beach side condo and blast whatever I want it would be great!
I currently work in public accounting… and I do not have enough motivation to stay and live my life through busy seasons. I am going to see what other jobs are out there for me at the end of this year. Hopefully I can find a boring, finance related job!
@@nicolequintero4349 definitely Public accounting (from what I’ve heard) can be super intense. Personally I work for a startup but prior to that worked for private corporations and it’s much more relaxed. Wish you best of luck on your journey
I am in a different field altogether, but doing the work sounds similar. I do 100% home office and this is awesome. This work is sometimes a bit of all or nothing for work load, but technically that does not matter in the company culture I am in as I can still use my hours flexibly, my manager has said to me that I never have to work overtime if I don't want to and ifI do work overtime, I can just take those overtime hours off from another day. Only issue is that my work demands high consentration all the time for proper results, and as one with adhd, that can be a pain in the ass.
Yeah, but wouldn't you rather be a lion tamer?
This. My husband and I work a boring entry level manufacturing job, as an aging millennial, and with the ~$20/hr each income in Kentucky, we afford a house, two cars, a month of vacation, and I spend most of my work day watching videos or playing games on my phone. I'm typing this at work. I actually spend almost no time on social media at home because it's what I do to pass the time at work, and when I go home I can focus on our dogs and my hobbies. And while I absolutely have the potential to do much more difficult jobs that require much more time and attention, I'm in a pretty sweet spot where work causes no stress in my life and the job pays for a lifestyle that most of my fellow millennials feel is beyond their reach.
This goal is attainable.
Kudos to you!
I think this lifestyle is attainable in most places like Kentucky)in the world. The only problem is young people don't want to live in most places in the world, only the biggest most exciting cities where is very unattainable..
@@doingnothingatworkyes because she’s living off someone else’s money (family, inheritance etc )
Smart 🎉
$20 an hour is terrible though lol
Thats why i love being a delivery driver for seed farms. You drive a lot, you dont have a lot of customers (only resellers) and you get to hear music all day long without a boss on your shoulders...
I’m so glad you discussed the idea of “do what you love and you’ll never work a day in your life”! It has never sat well with me because I enjoy my passions and hobbies precisely because there is no pressure to earn a living from them or excel at them; I can enjoy the activity for the sake of the activity and nothing else. It’s quite freeing.
My job now is boring; I do web development and manage social media for a CPA trade org. I work remotely 35hr/wk, have an awesome manager, there’s a healthy culture that promotes work/life balance and self-care, I make a good wage, and I’m valued and appreciated. It allows me to achieve my financial goals and to pursue my hobbies (gardening, pole dancing, rock climbing, travel, reading, yoga and more!) in my free time. I’m just happy that I can do all the things I love and that my job is pretty chill!
Thats not a boring job though. So many people want to become web devs as their dream job
Pole dancing? O.O
@@Cookiekeks yeah exactly people have varying definition of what they consider as dream job so makes sense
@@Cookiekeks Seriously, she doesn't understand how lucky she is. That is many, many people's idea of a "dream job". 35 hrs a week remote in web dev AND you are appreciated for your work? Come on lol.
@@Cookiekeks Its an annoying job, too much stress and frustration for not getting enough paid (in France). You always have useless meeting , supervising and problems, all the time.
I entered my “dream job” and was miserable. After my 3rd job of that kind didn’t work out, I finally realized that it wasn’t for me. After working other awful jobs with high pay that stressed me out to tears, I’m finally in a job that I don’t hate. It’s low pay, but it’s allowed me to be peaceful, be on my own, and not to be bothered. And that’s what I really needed.
Edit: Thank you for the likes. I never expected my comment to get so much attention! My job recently gave me a raise and I’ve been working some OT, so my money issues have been eased. Sending my best to y’all searching for a job that makes you comfortable both mentally and financially.
Where/what is your new job?
@@jsdhesmith2011 as someone getting a compsci degree i think that sounds freaking AWESOME
It’s a balancing act. I went from a high stress 106k job to a low stress 35k one. I love my 35k job but 4 years later, I’m heading back to the office because the reality is that 35k doesn’t buy you shit these days. I’m angling for a 70-80k role.. trying to split the middle. Good luck with it.
And of course, they don't say what the job is. SMH
Do yall feel sad about not getting paid enough money that you can travel abroad? What should i do?
Haha as a creative person, I definitely fully agree with this. I work an animation job and I was miserable in it until I got "relegated" to retakes, which is essentially just glorified editing of scenes with mistakes. But when I became a retake animator, my days just got infinitely better. The instructions are clear, you don't have to do any thinking except in rare cases. My favourite retakes are just like, 10 scenes in a row of "move this camera to the left". And best of all, it gave me more time to pursue my personal projects.
Some people say "your job must be so fun" and I'm like "no, not really, and that's how I like it." When my job was "fun" I was paid pennies and expected to do overtime. But the moment my job just became a job, one I could do well, with good coworkers and reasonable expectations, I felt so much better. My pay is better, my life is better. And all my creative juices go into the personal projects I can fund now with said job.
Do you believe in the value of your work?
What’s so funny is that I’ve been trying to explain this to my family for YEARS now. And yet, no one seems to believe me when I say that I really just want a job with stable hours and good benefits so I can find fulfillment elsewhere.
As someone who just quit their dream job this video sums up everything ive been feeling the last couple months. I moved to LA to pursue filmmaking and realized the industry is super toxic with insane hours. It wasnt something i could enjoy my life doing. Now I’m in the process of looking for that “boring” job. Thank you for the video!
i'm roboticists and despite Data Entry being "boring" the job is monotonous enough that I can watch Big Hero 6 Series while doing it XD. Which is why I'l just do data entry while doing robots in my spare time. Yes I'm a San Fransican BTW XD.
@@mq-r3apz291 i need that job!
@@mq-r3apz291is it work from home? Do you desire WFH?
Do film making on your own. You dont need LA
I bring this up to people all the time.
I went to art school and directly out of it I ended up doing a more corporate, boring, full-time job. It wasn't my exact field, but it was close to it, and I actually enjoyed it, but I was definitely bored a lot. After a couple of years I quit, moved, and started working my "passion" job thinking it would be more fulfilling. At first it was, and I was definitely excited to be doing it. Then relatively quickly the late nights, the long hours, the never ending stress of crunch, the job insecurity (freelance), and crazy entitled clients wore on me. I realized that the job and lifestyle just wasn't for me, but I felt bad since I had dropped everything to pursue this passion career of mine - the thing I literally studied in school.
I did that work for about 4 years, and ended up with high blood pressure, depression and an anxiety disorder. I don't regret my decision since it was experience and a life lesson, but it made me realize that I want to do my creative work for myself rather than someone else. I am okay being in a boring corporate job with security/benefits and pursuing my art on my own time.
Exactly my story. Only instead of HBP I had a nervous breakdown and spent 3 months on bed rest. I only create for myself now and love the peace of my desk job. Boring jobs with great management is awesome
Same for me. I was hospitalized earlier this year and decided that I need to look after my health before I get older and it gets worse. I still do art part-time and it's been a lot less stressful since I don't have to worry about money anymore.
oh, what's your current job now? (asked a year later) no idea how to shift to a more boring job + i also graduated art school and it suuuuuuuuucks so bad LOL
Most of you (including the creator of the video) seem to be forgetting the fact that, to know that a boring job is preferable, you must have been able to experience some semblance of a "dream" job in the past to be able to compare the two. Without this experience, people would always feel bad about not being at their "dream" job and constantly work towards getting closer to it. You might say that this is a trivial matter, and that if people just started off in their youth trying to shoot for boring jobs to begin with, it wouldn't be a problem at all. Sure, but is that how humans work though? I don't think so. It is human nature to dream and hope for a better future. It is human nature to look for some kind of profound meaning behind their existence, and gunning for boring jobs all your life is not going to fulfil that. Ergo, this video will only be convincing for people who have already been to the proverbial summit of the mountain and decided to step down.
Stfu no one asked u hahahaha 😂
Well said
Agreed haha 😂
I had a dream job but didn't knew it at the time. Mail delivery. Like paid pretty well for that time, no stupid meetings, no stupid assessment talks, no outside work studies, no thinking, just turn your brain to zero and do the work thats asked. Now it's like I am working hours that's not a job, it's a fucking career... I'm no workaholic! Meetings outside work that could have been put in a fucking email, and I have to use my brainpower like 24/7 to keep up coz if I even screw up 1 thing, someone's eyes are in jeopardy. And for what? Like sure statistically I'd earn even more then my father did when he worked and would be considered middle class by income alone.... but it's still not even close enough to be able to afford a fucking mortgage! Like I read an article last week.... you need to earn about 71.000 euros a year to even start thinking about a mortgage. And it's the Netherlands, meaning you work your butt off for a mortgage (never mind the other bills) that you can basically afford maybe an apartment that's less luxurious then social housing that people live in here that live off state subsidies and barely work at all.... like wtf is the point of working anyhow then?
@@stijnvdv2 Sounds like you need to "go west" so to speak... Move to another area that doesn't cost as much to live in. Chances are it's going to be boring as hell, but hey, you can't have everything in life. I'd decided to go out on a limb myself years ago and move far away from the capital city - like 12 hours of driving away from the capital city. There isn't much around but there is still enough for my liking (I can still get fast food at least :P), and the rent's pretty cheap. Hell, houses are also actually sort of affordable around here, so much so that I am planning to buy one outright at some point without ever signing up for a mortgage. (Cuz fk mortgage, yeah?)
At the end of the day though, only you can figure out the right answer for your own life, regardless of anything that I could say to you. Hang in there man. I have no doubt that you will eventually manage to figure it out, just as you have so far along every moment in your life. Keep going! :)
I recently just started an IT support job and it’s all that I love. It’s fixing routers, making sure inventory’s good, making sure that computers run smoothly. It’s by all accounts a boring job, nothing too wild, but I love it because it lets me have the freedom of finding solutions to issues my way and the work itself is just fun for me. So yeah I agree, a boring job is definitely much more fun and nicer than a more active job
A great reason to work a boring job is that if you don’t have to think too hard about what you’re working on, your thoughts get to be your own during the work day. That is, you can think about other things, such as art, solving problems in your life, how to get better at your hobbies, or whatever.
Thats why Sheldon from the Big Bang Theory worked in the Cheese Cake Factory 😂
@@TheRealOnlineAcc RT 🤣🤣🤣💯🤘
this is why you see a lot of comedians and artists working jobs like building maintenance before they transition to their art full time.
Yeah j think about my gaming stuff and strategy more than 90% of the time. Other times I get in my own head and I'm sad haha.
@@JoshDoes if that's what your life consists of at this point I think it's time to do a reevaluation my friend 💯💯🙄🤦
The only things you need from a job: the pay is good enough and the working environment is decent
The rest is up to yourselves to live the most out of your life
Dont forget short commute
I'm reminded of something I tell people very, very frequently.
"Never do what you love as a job. You will eventually hate what you once loved."
The only people who believe me are the ones who were lucky enough to go through it, and hoho do they understand now.
That is very true. I think there's a misunderstaning among people for what "loving' whatever they are doing is. A lot of people just think that something that is not stressing them out while doing that thing is them 'loving what they do' or doing some mundane repetitive stuff that they're used to the pattern of like an assembly line worker. For others, it may be their passion and things that give them joy on completion for not just completing it but enjoying the whole process. For the latter type, it really can ruin that passion or hobby.
Yup .. lots of people don't realise this, and don't know how the world actually works. Eg. the vets that wanted to work with animals, but just end up putting them to sleep on a daily basis.
Wedding photography and photography in general = hell once it’s for others.
While I live according to your motto (software engineer with plenty of free time making music), I disagree with it.
Do what you love as a job only of you're prepared to sacrifice everything else for it. The more what you love is popular (music making, sports,...) the harder it'll be to make it. You have virtually no successful people in these businesses with work-life balance.
If you are ready to sacrifice all, you're talented, motivated, lucky, and the stars align well.. You get to leave your mark in history with your work. Think great writers, artists, athletes. Some people are practically born to do one thing and it's only fair that they'll pusue it.
For me, financial stability, time with my family, a healthy and active lifestyle and free time to call my own are way more important than whatever achievement, title, or working field. None of those things are worth the hassle, we're only on this planet once
@@pianoplaynight I completely feel you! For me as well, I want something stable in which I can live a simple happy life with my family in the future. I’m a college student, I used to have a huge dream of becoming a filmmaker and changing the world with my stories and whatnot. I was a film major previously. But I realized a few months ago that I do not fit into the industry-I truly don’t like all things glitz and glamour and I hate hollywood. I don’t want any of that, glitz and glamour, as I said, I just want stability and being able to be free to live as I am, living a healthy and active life with my family and dogs etc.
I don’t want to suffer being like all those rising filmmakers and actors working 3 jobs to get a single chance for their story to be made into a movie or whatever. I don’t want to be living in instability.
I’ve changed majors and schools now and am studying pre-law, which I have a passion in and believe it will be a lot more worth it to me. I make little films and videos in my free time and enjoy it a lot as a hobby.
I always taught of unskilled jobs as beneath me. Now I work in delivery and it’s the best job I ever had. Flexible hours, no boss, no dealing with clients, no meetings and no hr bs.
I've been giving this advice to my now teenaged and young adult kids, and their friends, for years.
"Boring" is also steady, dependable and better for planning and mental health.
Let them chase the exciting i think its part of the process
As someone who has been in the jobs market for forty years, I would like to wholeheartedly congratulate the video makers here on a job well done. They are spot-on correct. I would like to add a few more pointers.
You have to decide which master you wish to serve: money? power? status and prestige? personal fulfillment? I suggest good old-fashioned *stability.* There is a definite satisfaction in filling a position that no one else in a given institution is doing or really even wants to do. If you are diligent enough to find that niche and are able to fit it, you have a pretty good chance of staying there without anyone clamoring to take your place. Nor will your employers be looking to get rid of you (unless you really mess up) because then they will have to _replace_ you. And that could prove difficult for the powers-that-be when what they really want is stability, too. Bottom line.
Be the paid equivalent of a paperweight, a doorstop. Because even the most hallowed of halls rely on paperweights and doorstops.
top-tier comment
Well said.
Thanks for this. I’ve held down a boring, decent-paying job for 15 years. I’ve always felt like a loser, but I guess it’s a matter of perspective.
@@Smoove_J As youngsters none of us dreamed of one day growing up to be as stodgy and mundane as we perceived of our parents (I did, anyway). But now that I'm there, I can see why my dad liked where he was at.
@@EmilyGloeggler7984 I appreciate very much what you are saying, and I think you missed the part of my comment where I said "decide which master you wish to serve." If plain, old stability isn't satisfying, then one should choose an endeavor more challenging.
I'm just saying don't underestimate stability. It is a reward of its own ilk, doesn't impede other opportunities in one's personal life, and it is worth pondering and/or trying before dismissing it as "boring."
This video speaks to me as it's been my plan all along to find a "boring" job that's simple but pays the bills. I always wanted to devote as little energy to work as possible to have more energy after work to do the things I want to do like exercise, take a class, or eat out. It's important to separate work from your identify so you're not so consumed by work that you have no life outside of it. Here's to those getting by while still pursuing their passions on the side. Now take advantage of every opportunity that comes your way!
The most important benefit of my "boring" hotel job: I leave my work at work. I clock out and it's over, I'm not expected to do anything at home besides take care of myself and show up the next day with a clean uniform ready to rock. Tons of fringe benefits (discounted rooms, free food, coffee, and booze, discounted gym membership) along with great coworkers. If I screw something up, the stakes are never that high and there's always a fix. I have plenty of energy to go to the gym. The lobby itself is a beautiful space with high ceilings and tons of natural light. I like it so much that I'm happy to pull some overtime if someone calls out last minute, it's really not that hard and I don't mind the extra cash.
10/10 highly recommend hotel front desk as a boring, easy, comfy job. It's "boring" in the sense that you don't really make any decisions, but every shift is a little bit different because you meet new people and take care of different guest needs or issues around the hotel. So it's not completely monotonous either.
This is one thing about RUclips I feel like people didn't realize has changed over the past few years. It's not a "oh I just upload whatever I want and make money" career anymore. Everyone who's maintaining a successful channel today is constantly (and in some cases hopelessly) fighting against the dreaded algorithm. Back in the day there were only a handful of creators who had a chokehold over the entire youtube sphere. Now there are literally tens of thousands PER sector. While it's still possible to enjoy being a RUclipsr and many people do, it's by no means the same promised land of the 2012 days where all you had to do was go "Hey guys! Welcome back to another episode of my Minecraft Let's Play" and boom in comes millions of views. Believe me, I wish it were that simple... 😔 I would give anything to be able to experience the golden age of RUclips.
Just like how you mentioned in your previous video on the content creator gold rush, now that everyone is trying to become one, the likelihood of success dwindles more and more.
Woah didn't expect to see one of my favorite channels commenting on another of my favorite channels 🤣
These are interesting insights, thank you.
We're still in a golden age. Get it now before it becomes too saturated.
You are correct in saying that you cannot just upload content anymore and guarantee that you will get any views but like with most things in life, change is enviable and things can evolve. With how many people post to RUclips now you truly do have to show your talent and be as good as the best if you want to make it or at least stand out and connect with an audience. It may be harder to make a rise on RUclips now but who's to day that is a bad thing.
Reminds me of all the "How to Retire at 35". The secret is always to work in online marketing while convincing yourself, and everyone else, it's not work.
I’m 42 years old. I’ve been working since I was 15. My experience has taught me that the biggest factor in my job enjoyment or hatred was the relationships I had with those who worked with me. Some of the crappiest tasks, such as burning shit in a war zone, can be fun if you’re joking about how much it sucks with your buddies.
On the other hand, garbage coworkers can ruin your hobby-turned-job. So what’s the take away from this? I think you rarely have the choice of who you work with. So don’t worry about if you’re gonna enjoy your job or not. If you have a good coworkers it’ll be fun. So the answer is to find a job that pays the most amount of money you can get. If it’s fun, you have money and you’re enjoying your job. If it’s a crappy job, at least you have money. Just my 2cents
That's why I got into trucking. Nobody around me to bother me
Also to add, find a job where the likelihood of good co-workers is higher. I like working with smart people and I have never regretted stretching myself to get into companies with a higher average IQ so that I could enjoy those daily interactions more.
THIS!!! I don’t know how many people who consider themselves to be intelligent, working in “dumb” companies complaining about their “stupid” coworkers. If you’re so smart, go find a better job! That shouldn’t be too hard if you’re as intelligent as you claim, right?
Yup, I figured this out some years ago. It's not so much what you're doing, it's who you're working for that determines whether you like your job. Unfortunately, most companies only care about money and will do whatever it takes to bleed you inside and out to make them their money. So naturally, most jobs suck. Therefore I've made up my mind to just go where the money is until I have enough to say "fuck you".
As a tax CPA - i agree! I dont do taxes for the love of it, i do it for the paycheck and that makes it easy it set boundaries. There's also a shortage because no one ~dreams~ of being a tax accountant as a kid. Highly recommend this career ngl
also accounting internships are paid. dont do unpaid labor!
As someone considering going into tax accounting, what's the work/life separation like during the tax season? I've heard some horror stories about abusive workplaces and basically living at the office for four months of the year.
I wonder if that's the same for Credit Analysts. I believe they also need to be CPA certified and I don't think anyone dreams of being a credit analyst lol.
Unpaid work is also much more common in "exciting" companies. If you want a paid internship, work a boring job.
Dude! Sign me up!
Accountants are one of those jobs we’ll always need.
i gave up being a law enforcement officer to be a SCUBA instructor in the caribbean. best thing i have ever done. back in reality now living back in the uk because of family and problems with my rental property, however, i would sell my house and go and do it all again tomorrow if i could. live life for you, not for others. furthermore, i recently just quit and walked out of a well paid government job because of the toxic environment
I think this has a lot less to do with "boring being good", and a lot more to do with working conditions being very unnecessarily poor these days. Obviously that can vary on a case by case basis and is in many *specific* cases quite the opposite of how things have trended, but overall modern working conditions are just worse than they should be and even have been. Obviously boring jobs vs "dream jobs" greatly tips the scales and exacerbates or minimizes these problems, but I do think the culture overall is just too accepting of a lot of unnecessarily poor conditions.
Even if you had ideal working conditions though, doing your passion as a job is likely to kill your passion for it. Sometimes, it’s better to do something you’re already bored by than to do ruin something you love.
@@LEFT4BASS If doing something as a job kills your passion, it sounds like you're the problem more than the job itself. Plenty of people love doing their passion MORE as it becomes their job specifically because they get more freedom to pursue it at a deeper level. If someone prefers living for the nights and weekends and doesn't want to stay in their dream job, the issue comes down to two possibilities: either you have a poor work environment (which is completely unrelated to whether or not you're doing your dream job) or you're just lazy. If you just don't like deadlines and consistently doing the same thing over and over again, then it's most likely the latter.
@@salum6690 I don't agree with you here, there is definitely the possibility of added stress or repetitiveness that spoils your joy for something. An example is assigned reading. Many kids hate to read assigned books, but would happily read for their own enjoyment. There is also a matter of motivation. There is intrinsic (the act itself is rewarding to the person) and extrinsic (external rewards, like cash or fame). There have been studies that show when someone is given an extrinsic reward for something they had already found intrinsically rewarding, their motivation switches to extrinsic and they find less fulfillment in it than before.
Obviously some people still find fulfillment and love what they do as their career, but I don't think it is right to blame those who don't and just call them lazy
@@kamille286 I agree with you. I have come to think of "lazy" as a condition stemming from profound contempt for one's environment. It's like being trapped and knowing you can't get out. Eventually you just give up.
I see what you're saying, Simon. And I think that may have been part of the underlying joke of this video, sort of like: those "Office Space" clowns didn't realize just how good they had it!
You made a point in this video that deserves more attention: the more people who want your job, the harder you're going to have to work to keep it. Nobody is getting in line to replace proctologists.
I have known Gastroenterologists that made over 7 figures
When they asked for volunteers to be a proctologist, I put my hand up.
This is so true! My job is so boring, but I love my boss, work from home, and my stress level is at an all-time low. One of the managers asked if I would be interested in transitioning into something more. Um, no. I'm not a ladder climber. I love to work because I like making money. That's it. My job is not my life. It pays for my life.
I am an editor/proofreader for a company
@@kathrynnielson5689 thanks so much for being one of the only person here giving us an idea of what they do, not just making us dream to then refuse to tell us what's good haha
Can approve this. Did an apprenticeship as administrative administrator at a hospital and have been in the invoicing department for 1,5 years now after the apprenticeship. People are very chill but the work can be boring as hell at times. Things are not as modern as I'd like them to be. Some programs are pretty slow and it feels like they employ pretty much anybody that walks in the door. But still no stress, no drama, no corporate ladder. We get to work hybrid remotely. Only thinking of leaving to do such a job fully remote.
what degree do you need to get a job like that?
I just went from a stressful high paced job to a boring one and I’m never looking back. I love getting paid 20 an hour to mess around half the day
What kind of job?
@@nerad1994 I went from being a general manager at subway to being a personal shopper at Walmart. I live in the Colorado mountains where it’s hard to find employees so they pay better than most Walmarts
@@NeighborhoodBasketCase I’m a manager currently looking for a new job. Had to work 106 hours during the pandemic and now I would welcome a boring job gladly!
@@Christarxo that’s absurd! I would go crazy working that many hours. I say do it! Worth it for the sake of sanity
I'm just 20 but what I've learned from my cough cough *dream job internship* was that it made me miserable. I was there for 2 months and I understood these things on a deeper level. I was ready to leave the damn internship within 2 weeks and the whole internship was for about 5 months, I quit after 2. Now I live by my own motto, "Fastest way to kill your passion and hobbies is to make it into a job". Now I'm learning a skill which is hard and I don't want to do it but pays above average and even sounds boring. Thank god I learned this early in life.
I agree 100% with this. I've experienced this first hand - the higher you climb on the corporate ladder, the more stress and anxiety you have to deal with. Even if you get paid more, it's not worth the damage that your mental health takes. You should avoid feeling like your job defines you at all costs.
The rich are money-minded; that's a lesson I've grasped from the very beginning. My desire to build wealth has always been strong. I’ve set aside $160K since 2020, and I’m eager to invest it in the stock market to grow my financial future. I’d love to hear any recommendations you have.
I think the safest strategy is to diversify investments. But if you need proper advice, consider speaking with a financial expertise. Don't get me wrong, you can do it on your own, but financial advisors have a lot more knowledge and expertise in this area.
Agreed, I've always delegated my excesses to an advisor, since suffering major portfolio loss early 2020, amid covid outbreak. I'm now semi-retired and only work 7.5 hours a week, with barely 25% short of my $1m retirement goal after subsequent investments to date.
That's impressive! I could really use the expertise of this manager for my dwindling portfolio. Who’s the professional guiding you?
My CFA, Judith Lynn Staufer, is a renowned figure in her field. I recommend researching her name online; you’ll find all her credentials and everything you need to work with a reliable professional. With many years of experience, she is a valuable resource for anyone looking to navigate the financial market.
Thanks a lot for this suggestion. I needed this myself, I looked her up, and I have sent her an email. I hope she gets back to me soon.
Very interesting! Many years ago, I learned that local radio DJs (a pretty cool job back in the day) was really poorly paid. Even today, radio DJs average around 30k. It's close to minimum wage. The idea is, it's a "cool" job so people were willing to do it for what passed as local fame and apparent prestige. Tons of jobs are like that and this video gets at the deeper reasons why.
its a typical entertainment job where there is a long line of people willing to do it. which is why so many of them are youtubers.
My job sounds boring and requires a long time to explain to people outside of the industry. I'm not a manager and I'm probably making the top 5% of what people who graduated with my degree make.
Yeah well, that might be an average of all DJs but in reality some make less and some make a lot more.
That's partly because a radio can change from amateur in your garage, to college, to national network, or podcasting at all those same different levels and even worldwide...
and partly because the entertainment industry is very much corrupt. Payola, which is the act of paying a DJ serious money in cash in order to get a certain song "spinned" on the radio, is unfortunately quite common.
@@aluisious what you do?
@@aluisious What do you do?
One of the best pieces of advice I was ever given was this:
"If you love golf, become a ski instructor.
Do something that facilitates your ability to enjoy what you love, don't do it for a living, you'll end up hating it."
Which echoes a lot of what was said here. Thank you for the reminder of that advice.
@@P.90.603 how do you get one of these good paying easy jobs though? Where do you look to apply? What qualifications do the companies seek? What job titles are you looking for that imply good paying and easy?
@@P.90.603 Thank you sir
I agree with you 100%. I used to love reading and writing so I got a bachelor degree in English literature with a double minor in creative writing and business/finance. The only books I actually read in those classes were those I already read in middle and high school. I started hating reading to the point I'd cliff notes my essays or pick random pages to base essays off of. Once I read a book cover to cover and wrote a paper and got an f on it. I then picked random pages to base an essay off of for the next essay assignment and I got a and b grades regularly. Even only cliff noting the book netted me b grades on mutiple choice whereas I'd read the whole assigned chapters and get a c. Now I hate reading much aside from news articles and the RUclips comments and memes.
@@danielglidewell don't ever feel afraid or insulted for ever getting 'fired' from a job....Look at it as a stepping stone, incentive, a huge favor and a helping hand up.
Woah! This was the best career advice people could have ever asked for. I always believed in this philosophy but wasn’t sure if that was the right mindset. Thanks for reaffirming my belief system. A job is a place to earn money and build connections. Period.
Yeah, "work with what you love" is not good advice. "Don't work with what you hate" is better.
@NorthOfWindsor I don't think our jobs should *have* to be the source of meaning in our lives. No problem if they are, but I think it's totally fine if you just use your job as a means to make money for something _else_ in your life that will give you fulfillment/enjoyment.
Blah blah blah just like and subscribe like y'all were told to
what good are connections if your goal was to work for a lazy company that lets you get away with being lazy though? As soon as you interview with your new "connection" - everyone will realize you're piss poor at your job and worked at a joke company?
Amazon is a sweat shop and everyone knows it. But when people interview somewhere and have amazon on your resume its like a masters degree, because they know you can hack it.
"So this is a new position that require quick thinking and dynamic adjustment. Can you describe your last job?
"It was great. 2 hour lunches, boss was never in the office. Work load was light and no one ever checked it. Everything was mostly automated so i ran a report once a day and hung out in the cafeteria the rest of the time."
"Got it. We'll let you know."
@@lucidzfl lol someone is in denial.
Started as a cleaner 3 weeks ago. Got promoted to team lead and then dayshift. Got myself worried I wouldnt be able to keep up from how detailed night shift was. Figured out a week in all Im expected to do is mop floors, change garbages and sanatize bathrooms. Half of my shift is me wondering how Im going to look busy, waiting for a mess to be made, or walking around wiping windows and door handles pretending they were dirty. Not high paying. Most of my stress is from hiding the fact I dont do a lot from my bosses (who arent even in the building I clean)
I gotta agree with this. I work technical support for a software company supporting our customers admin teams, and honestly it is boring. However, my company respects us. I got a performance based raise in my first year, something unheard of especially for new college grads in 2023. It pays the bills, has great benefits, retirement matching, and a good path for promotion in the future. I bet I could find something that sparks my passion, but instead I get something low stress 90% of the time, work from home, feel secure in my job, and pursue my actual passions outside of work. And they never bring me great stress because they don’t become my job.
pretty much what I do aswell
what job may i ask? and what is your education background. Im interested in the field
I work with someone who tries way to hard to gain the company's recognition. I don't wanna be that guy. I make like 90% of the money that person does but I put in half the effort. That's how you do a job.
May I ask what company you work for? The company sounds awesome
@@TrevorReidelthe Op is in technical support, so do I. I have an accounting degree, but honestly that’s overkill.
If you are looking at degrees recommend an English or communications degree and a minor in computer science, accounting or finance. The English or Communications degree will help you a lot with being able to do any support role as most of the time you have guides to help troubleshoot issues. You don’t need a lot of technical knowledge, most you learn on the job.
This video came to me at just the right moment, it made me realize my job shouldn't be a major source of stress in my life. Applying for new jobs right now and realizing how qualified I actually am now.
the same sentiments goes for me and i really needed to see this comment. thanks man!
@@allisonirvmiller4670 get that bag sir
there's people out there that make their living on art and sports
@@angelachanelhuang1651 I agree, I am a hobbyist game designer so believe me I understand passion driving people. But a job that is your passion can be used to manipulate you and eventually make you hate your passion.
Agreed, I tried several different types of sales and while the sale was exciting you were never good enough. Now I'm an Insurance Underwriter. Hardly anyone knows what I do. Nothing exciting happens. I get to work remotely. Have great benefits and 4 weeks time off along with a bunch of holidays. It's almost zero stress and few people know how great a career it is.
So few people liking this comment suggests they really didn't assimilate the truth of this video. A lifetime of media conditioning to despise normality and seek the far-out will not fade away easily.
This sounds sick, yall hiring?
I am in sales and despite being at the top, the treadmill constantly makes me feel not good enough.
@@bill_the_butcher www.bls.gov/ooh/business-and-financial/insurance-underwriters.htm
Requires a bachelors. I have a social science degree and underwrite ships, boats, yachts, marinas etc. I always liked boats. My company does equestrian (horse) insurance. Homes, financial advisors, trucking fleets, literally anything you can imagine is insured. There's thousands of open insurance jobs but people think its boring. You could be an aviation underwriter if you want, search indeed for underwriter jobs.
I do sales now as well. Funny enough my boss told me to try and NOT be the top sales person because it brings scrutiny on your work. Keeping middle of the road brings it own challenges but yeah corporations are never happy.
I love my boring corporate job. I work remote and there isn’t really “work” for me to do (or I do it in the morning and I’m free for the rest of the day) and I’m able to focus on my hobbies (which have turned into an awesome side business!). It pays good and I have zero stress.
I spend my time at my boring job doing homework, youtube and I started focusing on my physical and mental health.I am very grateful for my job
Thnx for this vid! I grew up in a yuppie neighbourhood where everybody has either become a doctor or lawyer. I work at a bookstore and I love it. Not to busy, not to calm. No staring at a screen all day 40 hours a week and Never overtime, we close at 6 regardless. My coworkers never 'compete' with each other because there is nothing to compete for :) so the mood is always relaxed and amicable.
Moved from a fast paced job to a boring job. Can confirm, my outlook on my own life so far has drastically improved. I feel great!
I had two very boring jobs when I lived in the UK and they were the best times of my working life. The first was in small village council office. I cant even recall what I did other than drink tea with my co workers all day and basic data entry. The other was in a call centre at the The Body Shop headquarters, all I did was answer the phone and enter product orders into the computer. That's it. Zero stress, great corporate culture and co workers. If I weren't retired, boring is what I'd be going for :D
I work a boring law office job, and it’s the best job I’ve ever had. I will not leave if I can help it. The place I work is steady, I know what’s expected of me, and this is the first place I’ve ever worked where I’m treated like a contributing member of the team. Every job I’ve had before this treated me like I was a buffoon, or unworthy of even being there. (To the point that I started believing they were right, and I was about to get out of the industry.) THIS place treats me like they actually want me there. They respect me, walk through ideas with me, explain to me when they want something new or different, etc. and nobody has EVER belittled me. It makes all the difference in the world.
Hello, that sounds very interesting, is it possible you could elaborate on the scope of your job, i'm an aspiring commercial contract lawyer and am always interested by the people who work in law and some of the stories I've heard and read are absolutely fascinating.
I think a lot what people consider a boring industry is highly subjective. Law, banking, or medical may be boring to some, but it really complex highly varied. Compare to a role, the fictional paper selling role and then you can get a truly boring industry. You may not be interested in law, but it is pretty deep discipline and there's plenty to learn and high a mount of versatility and sub specialties available. Compare that to selling paper or cleaning services. You want to work in a complex industry, but an especially a boring one with less competition.
"Every job I’ve had before this treated me like I was a buffoon, or unworthy of even being there." That sounds like every retail job I had 😂
My sister in law went from a highly stressful corporate marketing job to taking a paper filing position at a friend’s private law firm. She feels the same way 😊
I used to work in a factory. It was an easy job, with fun coworkers and supportive management and good work hours. I left that job to follow my dream and become a commercial pilot. I have now been working as a pilot for the past three years and I’m miserable. I deal with toxic managers, cut-throat coworkers, and a horrible schedule that forces me to live in hotels. Combine all of this in a career field that by nature comes with a zero tolerance for failure and to say I’m a little stressed out is an understatement.
feel for ya mate, on the positive note, you can always quit and go back to the factory job any time
I got into programming because I wanted to make games, but the more I heard about how the industry is using the whole concept of a dream job against people like me, the less I wanted to do it. On top of that, while making games in my spare time, I quickly found out that programming games isn't all that different from programming something like banking software. The only difference comes from the creative design process, which in any gamedev company would almost excusively be done by seniors who have been working at the company for 10-20 years.
Nowadays I have a not very exciting job, but it still requires some problem solving involved in all software development. I make decent money, get nice benefits, and I'm not very stressed. And because it's not my dream job or my foot in some industry door, I can just leave whenever the situation changes or I get a better offer. So far I changed my job twice in ~8 years, and got almost double the salary, on top of other benefits each time. This leaves me plenty of time to work on games in my spare time 100% creative control.
This is the goal
Man so true. I went into software and AI with the dream of working for some cutting edge startup or company like TESLA and as I’ve gotten older I’ve realized I absolutely love the calmer “boring” (although I still do satisfying work) work environment that I ended up pursuing.
I've been a gamer for a while and I have a minor in Game Development. Seeing how the gaming industry has deteriorated, how AAA games are microtransaction hellscapes; it definitely puts "Game Developer" on the "Career options to NOT pick" list.
But how do you have energy to develop games after work?
You create games to be remembered, you create banking software to make money to get by. Simple as that.
I had a boring job as a NJ Transit Police officer. It was one of the worst jobs I’ve held. It paid well but was not an “ideal” job by any means necessary. Leadership was terrible, and everyone from the bottom ranks to the top saw it as just a paycheck! That’s no way to live!!
This is so true. I’m 51 and I’ve worked in al kinds of “exciting” careers from entertainment to advertising. I was a child actor and achieved lots of notoriety before I was 18.
In my adult years I’ve been a writer, director, photographer, marketing guy, PR expert, etc.
See also: Lots of stress, lots of anxiety, lots of uncertainty and not enough money.
Now I’m studying to get my insurance license and I’m hoping to get in with a big insurance company and work a nice boring office job for the rest of my life. I can’t wait. Im saying this with zero irony. And the best part is, many of these boring jobs are now remote or at least hybrid.
This video is way more accurate than people know.
I hope it works out for you. I’m looking at the job market and the one common issue I see with working for a big insurance agency is they micromanage you to death and most expect you to put in overtime. Pros and cons to everything. Of course, if you are great at sales, the money will be good. We all have to determine what we value in life and go from there.
What a life.
I work in accounting which is widely considered to be a boring field, but finding a job in it was super easy and it isn't hard to find another one if you want to switch things up. It also pays well enough to fund my other modest hobbies.
I'm bad with numbers and dread such jobs but I would take it up as a challenge to pursue it. However, my interests are in creative pursuits, mainly music and cinema. Maybe I'll get to play a person who does accounting ha.
Get a specialty. Financial planner, Forensic accounting, etc. would make your job more challenging and better paycheck too
How are the hours? Also what size firm do you work at if you don’t mind me asking?
too bad i hate math and it requires a license in my country
@RGP-bv3jb it depends if you go private or corporate and how much overtime they make you do cause of prestige
There is a difference a job you love and doing something you love for a job. My last job as a field engineer demanded grueling hours, uncomfortable working conditions and a lot of travel. It was awesome, every day was a competition against other competting firms and assiting a client to crush the other operators. The completion drove me and I enjoyed construction. I would not on my own time try to level the hill in my back yard or build a pipe line. The idea that you need to love the subject is flawed, you need to love how you are working. Competition, analytics, marketing not necessarily what the subject is.
2 years ago I was a software developer, now I am a data analyst. I loved software development and programming, I loved it so much that when I got home from work I'd be thinking about my job. I'd say that it was TOO mentally stimulating. I couldn't for the life of me separate my personal life and my job. Now that I'm a data analyst I can still get the challenge and mental stimulation I enjoy but I'm also not constantly thinking about work.
@@monkemode8128 For a solid 6 months of the year the job owned me. 80+ hour weeks, work every day. It consumes my time, my health and relationships. But I really did love it. Like you I had to step away before it consumed my marriage and missed my kids growing up
The minute that I have to do what I love, I instantly dislike it.
@@KennTollens Exactly why a hobby or something relaxing shouldnt be your job. There are roles and skills that are used in other areas that avoid tainting what you love
@@cmdr1911 It was programming.
I’m a speech therapist, needed a masters degree to get this career. It’s fun working with others but the amount of paperwork, meetings, and extra time planning sessions is something I didn’t think about. I love what I do but I get home exhausted.
Im currently studying City planning and my "career goal" is to get into government. It's very well paid and probably the only employer that follows worker protection laws to a tee. Any overtime gets converted to holidays. No working on weekends. Regular wage increases. Best job security, I would be basically unfireable after 2 years of probation. Also great benefits
Good plan to get into government work. As a businessperson I ask you to please make sure you study economics and business on the side or make friends who run small businesses so that you can have a better understanding of how your planning and decisions effect the economic ecosystem around you. In my experience government employees are so detached from how their decisions actually impact the people around them because they live in a bubble of their government work. They understand the social issues, but they don’t understand the economics and business impact of things which directly impacts the social issues. I wish it was a requirement for government majors to get an education in business… if you can educate yourself in this or have friends in business who can educate you, you will truly make an impact in government with a more well rounded view.
Yes but you will have to comply with all their regulations and mandates.
Me too! But where I come from It’s 3 years of probation to get job stability in the government.
Government employees kind of piss me off
@@MomoKunDaYo well because they were smart enough to get a boring job that has a lot of benefits
As someone with ADHD, I already struggle getting motivated to be productive if I don't find the task at hand interesting enough. So the idea of working on a job I find boring doesn't sit well with me.
Yeah I think boring is actually the wrong word here. 'mundane' or 'not-flashy' or 'low prestige' might be better. Looking at the video, I don't think it's the job actually being boring that is the important thing, but jobs that are perceived to be boring tend to have better workplace conditions and less rat-race. The job itself has to be reasonably engaging ofc.
Hah, I've heard the same from a friend with ADHD. He always has to attend meeting that bore him out of his mind, and aren't even related to his specific role, so he keeps his mind busy by playing video games, as he works remotely.
He would still rather not have those meetings (and then not game) over having them.
ADHD is classified as a disability for a reason.
I'm pretty low on the spectrum when it comes to ADHD. It's really really bad. I remember just sitting in school for years not listening to a single word any teacher ever said. Boredom is so fucking mental painful Jesus. So I did as many extra curriculars as possible. Constantly feeling my day up all throughout middle school to college.
Afterwards I did allot of temp work which means filling in and answering one or two phone calls a day for eight hours 40 hours a week. I would read and look up and watch everything I wanted and when I went home I was bored bc I had nothing to entertain myself with. It was mental painful
Then I got a middle management job at a high in restaurant/alcohol store I had to do everything to know everything on both bars the retail store and I had to do administrative task and manage 20 people walk 20,0000 steps a day and commute to the city. All while reporting to verbal abusive and sometimes idiotic disorganized manager. And I didn't have weekends off so I was missing so many important events.
Anyways I got so burnt out. I was only making 55,000 for a job I should have been making at the least 80,000 (this is in San Fran wages are higher). Fucking hated that shit started to burn out and stop even trying.i let you l everyone walk So over me the whole time and I started So I got fired lol. I went on unemployment for a year. And I learned how to entertain myself the whole day. I got a boring job that pays me $120 less a month then the stressful job and I live a block from my apartment. So worth it. I've never been happier. I'm happy I had a year of to learn how to sustain and entertain myself and I also got on Wellbutrin and Adderall so things can always change
I've worked in an ER for 4 years. I also have a bad case of adhd. I ran nonstop for 12 hrs straight, 3 days in a row and even when I was at my absolute mind boggling busiest, I was still bored. Found an easier more boring job and I feel the exact same except more rested. I've since learned that I'm gonna be bored no matter what I do in life.
Moral of the story, adhd is ass.
When I was taking a work literacy course in high school, we filled out a questionnaire for our “dream job”. I was surprised to see questions like: “does your work take place primarily inside or outside?”, “Does your dream job give you access to windows?”, “Do you interact with people irl or over technology?” My favorite was “what does your dream job primarily focus on: people, animals, places, things, or abstract thought?” I think “dream job” is very titular based and not “what does my day in and day out look like and will that make me happy?”
i like this!!