My favourite computer programs to write are the ones that someone else has already given up on and declared "impossible". Oh yeah? Well, we'll see about that!
I remember getting that one once. At the time, I was doing something that people said couldn't be done â and I had been doing it for over 20 years, too â and the sense of accomplishment did give me a great deal of pride. What that something didn't give me, however, was a career and a real living, which is why at 60 I'm now struggling to just feed myself and keep a roof over my head instead of retiring in comfort like everybody else I know in my generation is about to do (or has already done).
So yeah, definitely strive to make the impossible possible, but also make sure it pays, and pays well. I found out the hard way that genuine accomplishment isn't just doing something. It's being successful at doing that something.
I've never gotten that fortune from an actual Chinese cookie; I saw it on Reddit.
Yeah, I enjoyed my work too much and didn't demand enough pay for it. Now I can't afford to retire and everyone thinks I'm "too old" (52, with a greymuzzle) so I can no longer get a job in the field.
I had a boss once who gave me a pamphlet of someone's advice for various kinds of computer programmers. For the hot-shot programmer (which I was at the time), the advice was "don't do it for love — make sure you get paid".
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Date: 2014-10-14 10:42 pm (UTC)So yeah, definitely strive to make the impossible possible, but also make sure it pays, and pays well. I found out the hard way that genuine accomplishment isn't just doing something. It's being successful at doing that something.
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Date: 2014-10-14 11:24 pm (UTC)Yeah, I enjoyed my work too much and didn't demand enough pay for it. Now I can't afford to retire and everyone thinks I'm "too old" (52, with a greymuzzle) so I can no longer get a job in the field.
I had a boss once who gave me a pamphlet of someone's advice for various kinds of computer programmers. For the hot-shot programmer (which I was at the time), the advice was "don't do it for love — make sure you get paid".