I’m a depressed web developer who’s hypothetically thinking about a possible career change. The issue is I live in a rural area. I’m wondering what kind of new career paths would be available to me out in the country? Two I can possibly think of would be a welder and construction, but I have no idea beyond that. Plus there’s the plethora of things I could possibly do online that Inhave no idea about.

I will most likely just stay as a work from home web developer, so don’t worry too much about me. But still wondering what possible alternatives there are out there, if anybody has any ideas they wouldn’t mind sharing.

I also realize that “rural” might not be specific enough, but I don’t want to get any more specific than that for privacy reasons.

  • Fondots@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    For me, and of course YMMV, dispatch was a significant pay upgrade from the warehouse I was working in in addition to the benefits. The dispatch center I work at is actually one of the lowest paid in my immediate area, but they’ve done a pretty good job of giving us raises, I’m definitely in a better financial place than I was when I started here even with everything crazy that has happened with the economy over the last few years.

    And at the end of the day, it’s hard to put a dollar value on just not hating your life because of your job. I could barely call what I made there a living wage, and in truth it really wasn’t, I needed 2 roommates to afford a shitty apartment. But if the roles were reversed, and the warehouse was the higher paying job I might still have made the move to dispatch and taken a pay cut and considered it worth the necessary lifestyle adjustments.

    For me, even just the hours I work are worth a lot, I avoid a lot of traffic because our shifts don’t line up with rush hour traffic, my commute takes me about a third of the time it used to despite working twice as far from home. I love working night shift (though I get thats not something that’s for everyone) and with the schedule I work (we do 12 hour shifts, which means longer work days but more days off, which I can certainly manage sitting in a chair in the air conditioning as opposed to breaking my back unloading a shipping container that has been baking in the sun,) never having to work more than 3 days in a row unless I want to take overtime, having a 3-day weekend every other weekend, and having days off during the week to run errands is amazing. I actually struggle a bit to figure out how to use all of my PTO because I can just plan everything I need/want to do around my schedule.