theandrewbailey
today at 10:48 AM
About 5 years ago, I got a certification that dramatically increased my salary potential. I got a job offer at a different company (where 2 former colleagues worked), and asked my current company to match it. They did. No big deal, I liked the work and the people I was working with, or so I thought.
Three years later, I was laid off, and the technology I got the certification in is largely obsolete, or at least, difficult to break back into without experience in the new stuff. Meanwhile, the other company I got the offer from has not laid anyone off, and has seemingly migrated all their employees to different stacks. To rub salt in that wound, the former colleagues still work there.
Lesson painfully learned: switch jobs when the opportunity presents itself. Not a week goes by where I don't metaphorically kick myself for not doing so.
Nowadays, I work in ewaste recycling.[0] It doesn't pay anywhere near what I was getting, but I figure it's a much better use of my skills than stocking shelves or washing dishes. Instead of dicking around with a laptop all day, I can dick around with a hundred laptops all day.
[0] https://www.ebay.com/str/evolutionecycling
bruce511
today at 11:33 AM
The problem with this kind of regret is that it's all based on hindsight. And hindsight is a game you can't win.
So sure, you made a choice and it didn't work out. But it could just as easily have been the other company that folded.
I regret very little, and certainly nothing that is influenced by hindsight. Right now I'm where I'm supposed to be, and I live in that.
Isn't that what regret is about? Benefit of hindsight?
Davidbrcz
today at 12:09 PM
It's funny, I've come to regret switching jobs a few times.