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Chris Mullin's avatar

I worked in the university of California for over 20 years, as a fund manager. It was boring , tedious, stressful and not at all fulfilling, also the commute sucked. It was also stable, and i got to work on campus . Before that I worked in Aerospace and Venture Capital, those both sucked more. However, I retired at 50 with a pension and full medical for me and my wife. Now I draw and whittle and make fermented drinks and live on a small hobby farm. Did I make the right choice? Being retired is great, but part of that is I don't miss anything about working. I think I like just not working. My old man was the opposite, loved working, and really struggled being retired and not being in the middle of the action. I think you are a great writer and have been reading you for at least a decade. Not sure if any of this helps.

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Angelica Frey's avatar

What frustrates me in this industry is the lack of linear progression: i’ve done it for 7 years and i can’t pinpoint any sort of evolution.

It’s hard to maintain working relationships with editors because even those who previously commissioned you are not afraid to ghost you down the line.

Personally, I am using substack as the avenue where I publish my best writing and am on the lookout for less sexy, more stable day job(s).

I’m ramping up my language tutoring business too.

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