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Doing well in life
 

[Closed] Doing well in life

 wors
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How would you define "doing well in life"?

Money?
Job?
Time?


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 11:36 am
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Happiness
Friends
Children
Spare time and what you do in it

Those are important for me at least, won't suit everyone


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 11:37 am
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Do you enjoy it? If yes then you are doing well in life.

Life should never be about work or money.


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 11:37 am
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The number of guitars you own?


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 11:37 am
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Not dying.


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 11:37 am
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How much your 'peers' envy you?


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 11:41 am
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not waking up worrying about bills

having spare time you can relax in and spend doing what you want

personal life good

being happy


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 11:41 am
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I used to think having lots of money would be a nice thing...but I think the lucky people are those who have discovered what they were supposed to do.

Top musicians, chefs, artists, composers...etc. etc.

They all are doing what they are supposed to do.

Who thinks they are doing what they were supposed to do?


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 11:43 am
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Being happy and not directly making others unhappy in order to pay for your happiness.

(I think that caveats it)


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 11:47 am
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wors - Member
How would you define "doing well in life"?

Money?
Job?
Time?

I fail on those three.

andyl - Member
not waking up worrying about bills

having spare time you can relax in and spend doing what you want

personal life good

being happy

and these four.

Getting rather pissed of about it to be honest. This thread is depressing.


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 11:52 am
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In my final year at school in 92', we did a questionnaire on a computer which would then recommend an ideal career path. Then we would get a conversation with the careers advisor who gave us the results.

Apparently I should have been a bin man or a shoe repair man.

18 years later and I'm a senior project manager at a tier 1 investment bank...my current responsibilities don't include refuse collection or shoe repair.

I think poor careers advice is why a lot of people end up unhappy in life...has careers advice improved in the last 18 years?


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 11:56 am
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To crush your enemies, see them driven before you, and to hear the lamentation of their women.


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 11:57 am
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I think a lot of people are unhappy because they think they need a career and not a job. Mibbe I was lucky, but I just got a job after school then worked hard at getting better at it until another job came along, which I worked hard at, etc, etc. The only time I remember thinking about a "career" was when I turned down the chance of promotion because I had started to think that there was more to life than money and work.


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 11:58 am
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Spare time is the main one as in not working yourself into the ground. Time rich and money poor.

I work with lads who think their lives revolve around work.

Work
sleep
work
sleep
go away to Turkey for a fortnight
work
sleep
and repeat.

Not for me.

Time to spend with the daughter.
Time to spend with Girlfriend.
Time to spend on the bike.

At the moment I am ticking all three.

I am in a job that doesn't pay a lot but I kind of enjoy doing so it's not all bad.


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 11:59 am
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In my final year at school in 92', we did a questionnaire on a computer which would then recommend an ideal career path. Then we would get a conversation with the careers advisor who gave us the results

I did that, for me it said Forest Ranger or Librarian, I have no idea to this day how two such different options could be come up with for the same person.


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 12:00 pm
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In my final year at school in 92', we did a questionnaire on a computer which would then recommend an ideal career path. Then we would get a conversation with the careers advisor who gave us the results.

Apparently I should have been a bin man or a shoe repair man.

18 years later and I'm a senior project manager at a tier 1 investment bank...my current responsibilities don't include refuse collection or shoe repair.

I think poor careers advice is why a lot of people end up unhappy in life...has careers advice improved in the last 18 years?

Poor school careers advice doesn't seem to have affected you. I don't know anyone who does what their careers advisor said they should. In fact I don't even remember what I was told, it was such an insignificant event in my life.

I wonder if anyone has ever been told by a careers advisor that they should be a careers advisor?


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 12:03 pm
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Servicing bikes, building bikes, riding bikes, breaking bikes 😀

I love what I do in terms of my life, it's hard because of my health, but thanks to my bearing kits I get spare time, which I use to fix other peoples bikes and help out quite a few riders. Who don't have a lot of money.

Lots of bikes to work on and my friends are all great characters.

I wouldn't say my life is perfect and there are things I would like to have, but it could be so much worse and I consider it to be a simple but good life!

If anyone lives in the Edinburgh/lothians area and doeasn't have a lot of money, I would be happy to lend a hand with keeping you mobile.

😀


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 12:05 pm
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In my final year at school in 92', we did a questionnaire on a computer which would then recommend an ideal career path. Then we would get a conversation with the careers advisor who gave us the results.

Apparently I should have been a bin man or a shoe repair man.

I think bin man came up for everyone, it certainly did for me and I remember the various discussions in the 6th Form Common Room afterwards about what a load of rubbish (pun intended) the whole thing was. I think mine actually suggested something science-y which is what I did for a while.


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 12:08 pm
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Where you're living.
What you're doing.
Who you're with.

2 out of 3 should be considered a win.

Currently I get all 3 😀

Wasn't always the case though.


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 12:13 pm
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I think if I earnt less than £35k I would consider myself a failure.

EDIT: reference to an old thread!


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 12:15 pm
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I think if I earnt less than £35k I would consider myself a failure.

Do what? You can earn £35k as a teacher and they are all failures. £60k minimum or you might as well give up.


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 12:17 pm
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You either is or you isn't. Done both. The first is way way betterer


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 12:20 pm
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I think if I earnt less than £35k I would consider myself a failure.

Yeah if you're under 25. 6 figures or you're a nobody.


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 12:21 pm
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I'm sat on a dull conference call in a job I no longer enjoy, I've found lately that the negative effects of this have an impact on other aspects of my life. There's nothing worse than getting up in the morning and having to raise the enthusiasm to leave the house when I'd rather stay home and play with my kids!

On a brighter note I'm actively working on fixing the job issue, once that is done everything should be rosy again. The most important things to me are my family and friends, but a job you don't enjoy takes the shine off of other things.


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 12:24 pm
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Winding folk up online.


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 12:28 pm
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What if you earn less than 25k.? Is that a complete disaster.?


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 12:32 pm
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I think if I earnt less than £35k I would consider myself a failure.

I tend to agree, I think £35K is the "magical" figure or the "cut off point" so to speak.

Reach the £35k mark and life becomes much more pleasurable. I've found I now spend Sundays taking my much loved TVR out for a spin on the country lanes, rather than sitting at home watching Hollyoaks omnibus like most of the sub £35kers do. Hell, I can even afford to get the suspension on it tuned and serviced aswell, for £4k a pop!

I cant see how you could be classed as "doing well" if your on less than the big 35


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 12:34 pm
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LOL at the teacher-bashing, teh last respite of the desparate and insecure - let me guess - "if you can do, do, if you can't teach?"

What a great education system you would give us 🙄


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 12:35 pm
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How would you define "doing well in life"?

Freedom and something to look forward to.


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 12:36 pm
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What if you earn less than 25k.? Is that a complete disaster.?

You can get more than that on benefits. For that money I would have to be working as Natalie Portmans underpants to make it worthwhile.


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 12:37 pm
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In that case, I used to be doing well, but now I'm a failure.


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 12:37 pm
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Apparently I should have been a bin man or a shoe repair man.

18 years later and I'm a senior project manager at a tier 1 investment bank.

Hmm. Wonder if everyone else working in the banking sector got similar career advice? Might go some way towards explaining the current global economic situation...


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 12:37 pm
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I cant see how you could be classed as "doing well" if your on less than the big 35

One of my managers who has got to be on that sort of money and then some has had a couple of failed marriages, kids he doesn't see and works pretty much 24 hours a day. The bloke never switches off.

Is that doing well.?


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 12:38 pm
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I think if I earnt less than £35k I would consider myself a failure.

I remember that thread.

And I'm a teacher 😆


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 12:39 pm
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the desparate and insecure

I am loving the irony of someone who can't spell telling me what a great education I could provide. 😉


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 12:41 pm
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Try the app, mappiness. S'posed to try and measure the environment your in when your happy or sad. Not tried it but recommended by friends as interesting to see the results.


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 12:44 pm
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If you need an App to map your happiness... you are critically sad.


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 12:47 pm
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Having a billion quid and being healthy enough (physically and mentally) to enjoy it would be my definition, I fall a long way short. Yes I'm shallow :p


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 12:49 pm
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Since it was £35k 6 months(?) ago, surely we should inflate that now - say by 4% (1/2 year at 8%rpi) so that's around £36.5k - Ha, instantly more losers! 😉


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 12:49 pm
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Doing well in life is when you understand and appreciate that you won't always do well in life. If you can get the balance right so that there are more positives than negatives in your head then you're doing OK 8)


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 12:52 pm
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What I don't fully understand is where all the pressure to try and be wealthy, have a flash new car etc. comes from. I mean, most of us are pretty lucky in this day and age, we take for granted that food, running water, acommodation, medical care etc is well within everybodies reach. Why should anyone feel bad if they dont have/want the latest tech gadget, car the most expensive clothes etc?


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 12:53 pm
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mintimperial - Member

Hmm. Wonder if everyone else working in the banking sector got similar career advice? Might go some way towards explaining the current global economic situation...


Very good! Perhaps somebody could organise a job swap, I wonder if anyone would notice?


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 12:53 pm
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Hmm. Wonder if everyone else working in the banking sector got similar career advice? Might go some way towards explaining the current global economic situation...

Hey, I just install software, I don't make decisions about anyone's money!


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 1:01 pm
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I'm happy at the moment because I just got my slate pool table delivered and installed this morning 🙂

http://www.mojvideo.com/video-bacek-jon-shaun-goes-potty/75a206d4e898347a2d0e

and I licked the chalk 🙂


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 1:19 pm
 Keva
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good health
happiness
peace of mind

Kev


 
Posted : 22/02/2011 1:23 pm
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