What is your goal in life and what motivated u to do said job u work in

I suppose the role of helper is much more difficult then any so called "job", I use it personally as an excuse to tell mother to stop interrupting my weekly 52 hour perpheads gaming marathons as I tell her it is my job (if i came clean she wouldn't understand the power of a true helper like me)
 
I suppose the role of helper is much more difficult then any so called "job", I use it personally as an excuse to tell mother to stop interrupting my weekly 52 hour perpheads gaming marathons as I tell her it is my job (if i came clean she wouldn't understand the power of a true helper like me)
I respect the hustle however enforcer is better
 
I went to tradeschool for pipewelding but lived pretty rural and couldnt drive at the time, so I had to do a 3-week internship at a plumbing company. They offered me an apprenticeship right away, and I was to shy to say no. Now I run my own plumbing company. Ig my life goal selfsufficiency
 
I went to tradeschool for pipewelding but lived pretty rural and couldnt drive at the time, so I had to do a 3-week internship at a plumbing company. They offered me an apprenticeship right away, and I was to shy to say no. Now I run my own plumbing company. Ig my life goal selfsufficiency
Thats very cool u should hire @Ryan Howes he lowkey broke bro
 
Went to study, now i'm a cybersecurity consultant, mainly working for hospitals within Belgium. I like the sector i'm in it's pretty rewarding. I have been able to buy an appartment and now live on my own, paying bills like any real adult :cool: .

I've always been motivated to make a change in the more public sector, but money is also very motivating. I think i combined the best of two worlds for me.

Next goal is being able to afford additional housing to rent out.
 
Went to study, now i'm a cybersecurity consultant, mainly working for hospitals within Belgium. I like the sector i'm in it's pretty rewarding. I have been able to buy an appartment and now live on my own, paying bills like any real adult :cool: .

I've always been motivated to make a change in the more public sector, but money is also very motivating. I think i combined the best of two worlds for me.

Next goal is being able to afford additional housing to rent out.
don't bother with public sector cybersecurity im warning you now
 
Went to study, now i'm a cybersecurity consultant, mainly working for hospitals within Belgium. I like the sector i'm in it's pretty rewarding. I have been able to buy an appartment and now live on my own, paying bills like any real adult :cool: .

I've always been motivated to make a change in the more public sector, but money is also very motivating. I think i combined the best of two worlds for me.

Next goal is being able to afford additional housing to rent out.
I respect a hustler gang
 
Starting in College for a 3 years ALevel IT Course, Never did enjoy or take interest into the learning system in the UK as it's more than shambolic, Ended up finishing that course and achieving 3 A Levels for it which I haven't used to this day. I started a Business around 2 years ago that once I had finished college allowed me to ramp up and see if it was going to work and it has, For anybody wondering I do Amazon FBA, Essentially purchasing things at a lower cost and selling them back onto Amazon as full price.
 
Still in school, but want to do primary teaching when I'm older. My mum is a teaching assistant at my old primary school, and if I have an inset day, I sometimes go in and help in a class (usually my favourite teachers lol). One time, I really helped a 5 year old who had a rocky childhood. He usually is throwing things around the room, but I sat with him all day and he just calmed down, and the teacher was very surprised and thankful. So that's a big inspiration for me.

TL;DR - teacher
 
i work with AI at the moment and it has been very rewarding, i can finally travel around the world which has been my goal for a long time.
 
I work for the Government as part of the UK Civil Service, specifically in the Project Delivery profession. I've worked across a range of Government Departments on a variety of projects and programmes, which has kept it fresh and exciting.

It wasn't my plan to do that - I was originally studying a law degree with a view of becoming a public/constitutional/administrative law barrister.

I fell out of love with university studies during the Covid-19 pandemic and had received a permanent offer for the Civil Service after busting my ass on a year-long internship. The fact that I had been living on my own since 18 without any support, coupled with the notion that I didn't see a realistic prospect of becoming a Barrister given the prohibitive costs and competitiveness of the Bar (which favours rich old-money tossers), I decided I'd rather start a stable career and start earning a good income. I thus withdrew from my law degree early and took a lesser qualification.

Since then I've been promoted, had four substantial and industry-leading project management qualifications paid for, and just finished the interview process for a further promotion outside of the Civil Service in the public sector, where I'll work to then move back into the Civil Service at an even higher grade, ideally as a Head of PMO or Project/Programme Sponsor.

Looking back 5 years, is it where I expected to end up? Not at all. Do I regret my choices? Absolutely not. Plus I still get to fight toe-to-toe on industrial relations as a Trade Union Representative, which fuels the remaining bug/longing for the law, and I'm also looking to become a Magistrate within the next 3-5 years.

EDIT: Just to clarify I am not responsible for the shithousery that is HS2 or Hinkley Point C.
 
I work for the Government as part of the UK Civil Service, specifically in the Project Delivery profession. I've worked across a range of Government Departments on a variety of projects and programmes, which has kept it fresh and exciting.

It wasn't my plan to do that - I was originally studying a law degree with a view of becoming a public/constitutional/administrative law barrister.

I fell out of love with university studies during the Covid-19 pandemic and had received a permanent offer for the Civil Service after busting my ass on a year-long internship. The fact that I had been living on my own since 18 without any support, coupled with the notion that I didn't see a realistic prospect of becoming a Barrister given the prohibitive costs and competitiveness of the Bar (which favours rich old-money tossers), I decided I'd rather start a stable career and start earning a good income. I thus withdrew from my law degree early and took a lesser qualification.

Since then I've been promoted, had four substantial and industry-leading project management qualifications paid for, and just finished the interview process for a further promotion outside of the Civil Service in the public sector, where I'll work to then move back into the Civil Service at an even higher grade, ideally as a Head of PMO or Project/Programme Sponsor.

Looking back 5 years, is it where I expected to end up? Not at all. Do I regret my choices? Absolutely not. Plus I still get to fight toe-to-toe on industrial relations as a Trade Union Representative, which fuels the remaining bug/longing for the law, and I'm also looking to become a Magistrate within the next 3-5 years.

EDIT: Just to clarify I am not responsible for the shithousery that is HS2 or Hinkley Point C.
Acer this is inspirational that its never too late i give u a medal
 
I work for the Government as part of the UK Civil Service, specifically in the Project Delivery profession. I've worked across a range of Government Departments on a variety of projects and programmes, which has kept it fresh and exciting.

It wasn't my plan to do that - I was originally studying a law degree with a view of becoming a public/constitutional/administrative law barrister.

I fell out of love with university studies during the Covid-19 pandemic and had received a permanent offer for the Civil Service after busting my ass on a year-long internship. The fact that I had been living on my own since 18 without any support, coupled with the notion that I didn't see a realistic prospect of becoming a Barrister given the prohibitive costs and competitiveness of the Bar (which favours rich old-money tossers), I decided I'd rather start a stable career and start earning a good income. I thus withdrew from my law degree early and took a lesser qualification.

Since then I've been promoted, had four substantial and industry-leading project management qualifications paid for, and just finished the interview process for a further promotion outside of the Civil Service in the public sector, where I'll work to then move back into the Civil Service at an even higher grade, ideally as a Head of PMO or Project/Programme Sponsor.

Looking back 5 years, is it where I expected to end up? Not at all. Do I regret my choices? Absolutely not. Plus I still get to fight toe-to-toe on industrial relations as a Trade Union Representative, which fuels the remaining bug/longing for the law, and I'm also looking to become a Magistrate within the next 3-5 years.

EDIT: Just to clarify I am not responsible for the shithousery that is HS2 or Hinkley Point C.
Tldr?
 
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