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If you are real, even if you double your income it won’t be enough (I’m a mom and working full time busting my a$$ and make about 200k and it’s chump change).
If you truly want a good life, marry rich. Invest in your looks go to a law school or law firm marry rich. It sucks but it’s the truth. |
200k is enough for a single woman mid-upper class life style. |
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This thread is depressing and misogynist, but true.
Can you move somewhere cheaper? My parents were teachers in a small town and they are you’re pretty well off and comfortable, but of course there’s no traveling to Europe on a whim. |
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I’ll bite, though the spelling mistake makes me think you are a troll.
Go into marketing for pharma/med device/bio tech. You aren’t going to get rich, but if you make 120k at a publicly traded company you’ll be getting 24k bonus and probably 20k+ in stock in a relatively low level job which does double your salary. Marketing in this industry is heavily regulated by the FDA. You need to demonstrate an understanding of this, get a cheap degree online in regulatory science from a place like ASU. Another idea, ask ChatGPT for suggestions. |
I’m sorry anyone who minored in math will not have the look to pull this off. The girl from wonder years not outstanding. |
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I’d go technical writer -> project manager -> program manager
Or software sales if you have the personality. |
Software sales is a blood bath right now. I have so many friends who were pushed out. And if she was hot enough to do medical/software sales, she could land a rich breadwinner. |
| You lost me in the poorly written subject line. |
That’s stereotype. We have plenty of geogous looking women traders in finance making their own 1mm, just a little bit of Botox. |
With two kids in daycare? And having to buy health insurance? Nah. I’m this poster btw. There’s 20 something olds with multimillionaire husbands who do nothing. |
| Sales |
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Look at average salaries for different jobs, info which is readily available online. Pick one, get the necessary education from a decent university, part-time so you can keep your current income, and then use your university's placement office to advantage.
A degree in communications hardly seems like a direct path to a high income, so it's time to put that obvious miscalculation behind you and get a degree in a more remunerative field of study. Or, enter a field which provides training, like law enforcement or the military. Federal law enforcement can pay twice what you make now; local agencies can still pay over $100K with a little experience, and you'll qualify for benefits like early retirement and a pension. |
This PP is correct. |
Do you read? I said single. |
Ah I thought single meant no married / divorced (one income). My advice stands lol. |