Goals

S O F I

Administrator
Staff member
#1
Did you accomplish what you set out to do? Since your join date.

For example, did Coonie finish med school? Good question, no idea.

me, i had no specific goals. i make more money than i thought i would (no, i'm not balling like that, it's nothing special) and got a girl who loves me but wouldn't say i "made it".

Also, shoutout to Rukas for keeping this board up still. From his twitter, looks like dude did a 180. Respect.
 

S O F I

Administrator
Staff member
#4
I'm doing better than I expected in my career. And it gets better every year. Dating girls substantially younger and hotter than me. But never got over my 1st love and would prefer something with depth before I get wrinkly. Too deep?

there's something about "substantially younger" and "depth" that generally doesn't go together. :)
 

Pittsey

Knock, Knock...
Staff member
#5
there's something about "substantially younger" and "depth" that generally doesn't go together. :)

I realised that the more you plan the more likely you are not to acheive it. Therefore you need to roll with the punches and reevaluate your goals regularly. So... If a hot younger woman is prepared to date me, who am I to turn it down. I am also realistic enough to know that the chances of success are small. When my balls get saggy and my hair thins, who wouldn't want to upgrade?
 

masta247

Well-Known Member
Staff member
#6
Sure, some things were completely not as planned and better than expected. Some things went just different than expected - some old friends that I thought will be there growing together settled, and there are also new friends. But in the end I made more money than I expected to in my 20s, I earned several average salaries per month in Poland, had a fancy pants apartment, found a nice girl I've been with for almost 3 years now, and I am living in Vancouver, which is the place I wanted to try living in, and she's here with me. It's just slightly more difficult, as a fresh arrival - most people assume you moved for economic reasons, it's harder to prove that you're awesome for such and such job, especially when you're 27 and from Poland. While in reality, it would be much easier for me from the economic perspective to just continue being in Poland, as I dropped everything and came here just because I really like this place, and wanted to do it while still young.

I'm living off my savings and investments, but about 2 weeks ago I started looking for work here, frankly mostly for the experience, doing something new and awesome and finding some local buddies here. One guy at a recruitment agency that was in charge of finding people for a job that was below my previous experience level but sounded cool to me told me at the interview that my resume is awesome, but to be more employable I should get some "Canadian experience" first, like work at a coffee store or something as the easiest way. I said just 2 months ago I finished managing the biggest telecom project in Europe, so thank you, but thank you for great advice. I applied to a few more places and never heard back, they never actually had my resume even opened. It was a somewhat amusing and wtf experience, since I thought I knew I can teach their management a thing or two about how to do their jobs. My girlfriend has the exact same experience, which is even more hilarious, since we were working on the same job before we came here and she also had great qualifications, so in the meantime she's doing a minor acting role on a Disney movie, since that industry is doing well here.
But I like some challenges like that. In the meantime I'm enjoying the weather, and this really awesome place I'm happy to be in, even if I might take a moment to sink in for this city.

What sucks is the way you get used to things - you achieve something you always wanted or more, and get used to it, and think about what would have happened if you took a different path, not the one you wanted to achieve and did. It's like there's not enough time to do it all in one lifetime, you know? That's what sucks the most. Or the fact that after you have it all, you want more. It's good when you're pushing to do more, but sucks when you have it and can't appreciate it. Because on paper, I have everything I could've wished for for my age.
 

S O F I

Administrator
Staff member
#7
Sure, some things were completely not as planned and better than expected. Some things went just different than expected - some old friends that I thought will be there growing together settled, and there are also new friends. But in the end I made more money than I expected to in my 20s, I earned several average salaries per month in Poland, had a fancy pants apartment, found a nice girl I've been with for almost 3 years now, and I am living in Vancouver, which is the place I wanted to try living in, and she's here with me. It's just slightly more difficult, as a fresh arrival - most people assume you moved for economic reasons, it's harder to prove that you're awesome for such and such job, especially when you're 27 and from Poland. While in reality, it would be much easier for me from the economic perspective to just continue being in Poland, as I dropped everything and came here just because I really like this place, and wanted to do it while still young.

I'm living off my savings and investments, but about 2 weeks ago I started looking for work here, frankly mostly for the experience, doing something new and awesome and finding some local buddies here. One guy at a recruitment agency that was in charge of finding people for a job that was below my previous experience level but sounded cool to me told me at the interview that my resume is awesome, but to be more employable I should get some "Canadian experience" first, like work at a coffee store or something as the easiest way. I said just 2 months ago I finished managing the biggest telecom project in Europe, so thank you, but thank you for great advice. I applied to a few more places and never heard back, they never actually had my resume even opened. It was a somewhat amusing and wtf experience, since I thought I knew I can teach their management a thing or two about how to do their jobs. My girlfriend has the exact same experience, which is even more hilarious, since we were working on the same job before we came here and she also had great qualifications, so in the meantime she's doing a minor acting role on a Disney movie, since that industry is doing well here.
But I like some challenges like that. In the meantime I'm enjoying the weather, and this really awesome place I'm happy to be in, even if I might take a moment to sink in for this city.

What sucks is the way you get used to things - you achieve something you always wanted or more, and get used to it, and think about what would have happened if you took a different path, not the one you wanted to achieve and did. It's like there's not enough time to do it all in one lifetime, you know? That's what sucks the most. Or the fact that after you have it all, you want more. It's good when you're pushing to do more, but sucks when you have it and can't appreciate it. Because on paper, I have everything I could've wished for for my age.

I hear ya. It's tough on people who grow up and have successful jobs but don't have an interest in starting a family. You make some money, live in a place you always wanted, spend money on whatever you want, travel wherever you want and yet still feel like unsatisfied. It's easy for people who know that a family is the next step. For me, I feel like I hit a middle age crisis before 30 :). Just a few weeks ago, I was dead-set on quitting my job in January and moving to Portugal and/or Spain for 6-9 months just to put a pause on life and make a change. GF didn't feel the same way so that plan changed :) but I do feel like I'm not ready for grad/law school, a different job, marriage, buying a house, or having kids. So it's a weird place to be in.

Obviously, a different situation but somewhat similar.
 

masta247

Well-Known Member
Staff member
#8
I hear ya. It's tough on people who grow up and have successful jobs but don't have an interest in starting a family. You make some money, live in a place you always wanted, spend money on whatever you want, travel wherever you want and yet still feel like unsatisfied. It's easy for people who know that a family is the next step. For me, I feel like I hit a middle age crisis before 30 :). Just a few weeks ago, I was dead-set on quitting my job in January and moving to Portugal and/or Spain for 6-9 months just to put a pause on life and make a change. GF didn't feel the same way so that plan changed :) but I do feel like I'm not ready for grad/law school, a different job, marriage, buying a house, or having kids. So it's a weird place to be in.



Obviously, a different situation but somewhat similar.

Well, it seems like it comes in waves, right?

But feeling the middle age crisis before 30 is somewhat crazy, since we're still young, and are supposed to act like young people do. I am feeling young, and the thought of marriage, kids and one own house until the rest of my days still feels like such faraway future, like 10 years from now or so, because why would it be otherwise? So don't feel old.

Actually if you or anyone else is still following along, I'll mention a somewhat more personal part about the story of my life, since I haven't done that in a long while in here, also the maybe more gloomy side to "having made it".

I was a silly and somewhat lost teenager in Poland, the only family I had was my working single mom and grandpa, I had rather shitty friends (which all together was also how I ended up on a forum dedicated to gangsta rap and 2pac fandom, my life felt pretty ghetto at that time, but I also liked learning English lol) and until 18 I had a teenage version of a parole officer for getting kicked out of high school for getting into fights, calling the school educator a bitch and other stupid shit, which now seems hilarious. The combination of the parole and high school kickage ended up awesomely, since I got myself into a new private high school with really interesting people in it - the parole sent me there after I got kicked out of a really shitty (think even eastern-europe shitty, a classmate/ friend got stabbed to death with a fencing-pole kind of shitty high school).
The new school made me new friends. They were good students, but extremely funny, everyone felt unique too so it was actually fun to be there. At about that time I was growing less ridiculous, I developed hobbies such as martial arts and technology, realized I'm good at those things and would prefer doing cool things. I cut ties with all of my past friends. I got to be on the national team in Kyokushin Karate in the meantime and after a few hard years of catching up at maths, which I still don't like..

I barely managed to pass the entry exams to get into a very good and strictly tech uni that I found to be the coolest uni I could go to for me, and also happened to be the best IT institute in Poland. It had great people in it, it was an awesome time in a way, because it felt like a boot camp of overcoming challenges together. The negative was that over 8 years that I spent studying there, there was not a single party or fun event other than cool and practical hard work and working on projects overnight at someones flat, or celebrating someone selling their prototype robot to Toyota with pizza and coke in the computer room- that was as much of typical "fun" as it's gotten.
It was a school from which the people who had party in mind would get kicked out or remain forever students of the first year. Most of my friends were very study-focused. I didn't mind that, since I really loved being around people who were actually awesome at cool tech, and my idea of fun was to travel to a new country every summer holidays, sign up for some international class there and meet new people who thought alike to have awesome adventures there together.
That was by far my favorite thing, so I had this plan to be in a position to have actual money (so I was working and studying, sleeping for 4-5 hours a day for a few years straight, except weekends), graduate (so more time after) and live in a completely new, awesome place. I even had a few close friends that I met throughout the years who wanted to go to Canada with me after graduation.

Earlier this year, after 8 years that first got me headhunted for a job at IBM, now I had to give up on my positions at the university senate and student government, my position as the head of the education committee, president of a scientific circle and member of the faculty of my department, that I was given throughout those years, because now I just graduated with a master's degree, top of my class. It was a somewhat sad day since I really liked spending time at my uni, and the people there. I had invested a lot of time there, and yet I wouldn't change a thing.
My friends from uni made the Witcher 3, my best uni friend who's actually the only graduating girl and one of the best students, who was the grade-competitive one and always followed me along to all uni organizations spent months working on the Galaxy phones in Korea and the US for Samsung, a job that she got because of me rejecting it and recommending her because I was "going to contract for IBM-babyy" at the time, while others started their companies or are otherwise doing well professionally.

A few months after, another sad moment of leaving the job because I was granted a temporary work permit to Canada. I made my decision in a hearbeat, even though at work everyone treated me like a prime family member and I was getting paid very well. There were tears of coworkers, mine and senior managers, as it was a Korean company, and a lot of farewell gifts. It wasn't any easier, since I met my girlfriend at work, and she left with me, and we were 2 most senior project managers on the Polish team - and she's only 23, so she was also a local office superstar. We had 4 separate farewell parties with the same office people, one with the minister of telecommunications and digitization of Poland who is a political legend, who was also working for our project at the time, and I even received references from the Vice-president of the biggest Korean Telecom. Great but sad time, the farewell was.

And now I'm here, in Vancouver, where I'm applying for more relaxed jobs now, so I could still get one of those awesome hikes after hours and yet nobody so far even checked out my credentials! But I love this city, and it feels like an upgrade still, since I am where I want to be and I wake up happy every day and if not, I just take a look outside the window of my Coal Harbour condo (it's a fancy pants neighborhood where I'm apparently the only unemployed person at). The nice people around are hard not to turn the frown upside down too, yo.
But still, those things are quite shallow if you don't have people on the same page to share those things with, and that's I guess my problem. When you're at school it's easy, because pretty much everyone is on the same boat. Then everyone goes separate paths, and people change and grow (sometimes in the bad sense, prematurely).

On paper all goals are in check. But, well, some friends graduated last year or just 2 years ago, and it feels like everyone bailed out to go with what we all originally believed was "boring day to day life". In their freaking mid-20s!
When I meet new people they are either young and annoying college party types in the process of wasting their future, which as you probably realize by now I can't really relate to and it's hard to ignore anymore, or older and all grown up and about to settle at freaking 25-28, or the clueless types who have always been somewhat fucking around and continue doing so.

What the hell, right? Where's the good and independent youth that you're supposed to enjoy when you're on your own, the prime time of your life? You are smarter now while still young and now you have the money, you have your degree, you don't have those limits and obligations anymore, finally. What happens to people that they decide to suddenly get new obligations and spend all of that money on more things that will never make them happy while being in the same place for the rest of their lives to come? It feels like people graduate and immediately feel old, or otherwise less down to experience life, and they settle for less. It feels very lonely, because it feels like you can't enjoy life after you accomplish something that you wanted to for a long time, because at the end of the road you don't have many people to relate to and share that time with.

In my case, I'm at the point where I've gotten my master's degree and got off the career and within just a few years got shit done that I wanted to, and I feel like I'm ready for life now. So here you come life, adventures and all those things I was working for, that I was promised, right? Well, more and more of friends are much less down for it these days, they "can't", it's work-home for them, and settling for less, and seeing that sucks!

So don't settle! Don't have middle aged crises.
 

dilla

Trumpfan17 aka Coonie aka Dilla aka Tennis Dog
#9
I'm no life coach but life turned itself around for you real quick from juvenile delinquent to motivated engineer. You sound like the opposite of me in that you moved up the ranks fast because you found something that just clicked with you and in spite of a lot of this stuff playing in to your talents, you worked your ass off on top of that to make sure you didn't fall behind.

You probably need to take a break and enjoy life a bit. I'm sure you're loaded, for an unmarried guy, so why not splurge on some tech or a vacation, if that's what you're in to. Maybe you're having a "crisis" many people get in their late-30s and 40s at this point because a lot of what you've done is what people only dream to have accomplished by 40 or 50. You might be pretty far ahead of schedule and now you're knocking at the door of the notion of settling down and starting a family. You may not be ready or you might be, but I see it as the equivalent of a teacher assigning a class to read chapters 1 and 2 of a book and you go ahead and read the whole book in a night. Now the next few weeks, you know what's going to happen and so class isn't as interesting anymore until everyone else catches up.

So don't remain stagnant and let your skills go to waste, but maybe now you stop to smell the flowers a bit.
 

S O F I

Administrator
Staff member
#11
Yes, I have. I've achieved my main goal of becoming a teenage mom. Also, since 2001, I've worked tirelessly to foment racism, Islamophobia, and xenophobia around the world. Brexit and the rise of Donald Trump are the some of the fruits of my work.

Now that we got that out of the way, let's hear some words of wisdom from Jokerman :)
 

Tha_Wood

Underboss
Staff member
#12
I didn't really have any goals when i first started posting here. I was young and stupid and was preoccupied with getting as fucked up as i could. In the ten years since i first joined i have changed a hell of a lot, mostly in the last 4 years since i have been with my girlfriend. Ive gone from having no real goals working a dead end job and now i am at university studying to be a primary school teacher and also majoring in history, just finished my second year out of four. Other than that i have stopped drinking almost completely, this year i have only gotten drunk once and didn't let myself get out of hand.
 

Casey

Well-Known Member
Staff member
#13
I have a young, gorgeous girlfriend who also loves Prince as much as I do (that's how we met), I have a new album coming out with Swami in a couple months, I'm working on a different and new musical project for next year as well, I live in a place that was recently voted the number 1 place to live in the whole of the UK, and I'm enjoying life a lot, despite 2016 being a massively shitty year.

I've been reflecting a bit recently actually, because my ex-wife recently got re-married. It's been nearly 6 years since we divorced, and we haven't spoken for nearly 3, but that's the type of event that makes you reflect. Come to find out I actually feel nothing - no lingering anger or bitterness or regrets. I'm actually really happy and in a really good place mentally.

Goal wise, I should probably make some new ones, because I feel pretty fulfilled at the moment.
 

Da_Funk

Well-Known Member
#17
I've always viewed life as a joke of sorts which has led me to be the guy who rarely takes anything seriously. My hard to rattle and anti corporate disposition has paradoxically allowed me to succeed quite well in the corporate environment.

Since I've last posted here I've traveled to 5 continents, seem and done both beautiful and not so nice things, had my heart broken a couple times and broken a few hearts myself.

I don't drink or take drugs like I used to but I'm still partial to a good time. I'm with a girl who I love more than I thought I ever could, and who loves me back just as much. It's funny, we're literally from opposite sides of the planet and met in a city neither of us are from yet we're perfect for each other. We're seriously thinking about moving to New Zealand at the end of next year when she'll be finished her masters and I should be close to done mine. It means I'll have to quit my cushy job but at this point I don't care a whole lot about money; as long as I have food and shelter I'm content.
 

Rukas

Capo Dei Capi
Staff member
#18
I'm doing good. Came off my motorcycle on Xmas Eve and shattered my leg, so still doing physical rehabilitation and dealing with that, but am good.

I don't know where to start, AMA?
 

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