Anonymous wrote:I mean that work is boring. Is anyone passionate about financial regulation or it was their dream in law school to do it? Probably no. People enjoy their colleagues, the day to day work projects, their work-life balance, good pay for reasonable hours. It's not complicated - what were you really expecting?
If you want a career you are passionate about, dig deep and think about what are your real interests, what kind of day to day tasks would you find exciting, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Steer clear of the FDIC. Gross mismanagement. In every division.
Now the union is fighting again. Management pulled one last week. People now going back a day and a half or some nonsense.
Anonymous wrote:I mean that work is boring. Is anyone passionate about financial regulation or it was their dream in law school to do it? Probably no. People enjoy their colleagues, the day to day work projects, their work-life balance, good pay for reasonable hours. It's not complicated - what were you really expecting?
If you want a career you are passionate about, dig deep and think about what are your real interests, what kind of day to day tasks would you find exciting, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Steer clear of the FDIC. Gross mismanagement. In every division.
Now the union is fighting again. Management pulled one last week. People now going back a day and a half or some nonsense.
Anonymous wrote:Steer clear of the FDIC. Gross mismanagement. In every division.
Anonymous wrote:Unless you’re a pro athlete or a musician, your job generally isn’t going to be enjoyable or fulfilling. It’s not supposed to be. There is a reason they have to pay you enough money to sustain your life (and maybe that of a few additional people) to get you to show up.
I’m also in FinReg and, on balance, find it somewhat interesting and (relative to a bunch of other specialties) highly lifestyle-friendly. And like anything else, by the time you become a seasoned practitioner and recognized expert, it does become more enjoyable—but that’s just the general ego boost feeling that comes with praise and being known/respected within a community. So, something to look forward to in 20 years or so.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean, you get paid for work because it isn’t something you would do for free.
Find your self-worth somewhere else and do your job.
Better is to get paid for something you’d do for free. Keep searching.