nicksaiz65
Master Don Juan
- Joined
- Nov 27, 2017
- Messages
- 3,737
- Reaction score
- 1,476
- Age
- 27
Wanted to reach out again to get opinions on the next steps in my career…
Previously I made a thread about how my tech job was leaving me with no time. The main reason for this was I wasn’t actively scheduling my time, I was just using a simple to-do list. When I started scheduling everything and living out of the calendar like Cal Newport suggests, everything became so much easier and I have much more time. I don’t feel so overwhelmed. I’m not worried about the time management part of things, and I’ll still have time for myself.
I’ll quickly run through this again.. I work as a software engineer, as a government subcontractor. Yesterday I found out that my contract has been renewed until 2025. My salary is at $120,000 per year and I have a mountain of debt that I am still working to pay off. My goal is to become debt free, save a lot of money, and then ball.
The absolute fastest way to pay this debt off would be to have two tech jobs, get my salary into the $160,000-$200,000 range, and then chunk all that extra margin at the debt.
However, government jobs are not compatible with OE. I would need to quit my current job to do that, and work a non-government job. It’s very likely that that would cause me to take a temporary pay cut until I could land that second job. But after that, my income would skyrocket, and the debt would be gone super fast…
This has a high reward potential but it does seem a bit risky. With the state of the job market and my current debt, is this a smart proposition, to work towards OE and just deal with the pay cut? Or should I keep doing what I’m doing, keep working my government job, and continue to whittle down my debt?
Previously I made a thread about how my tech job was leaving me with no time. The main reason for this was I wasn’t actively scheduling my time, I was just using a simple to-do list. When I started scheduling everything and living out of the calendar like Cal Newport suggests, everything became so much easier and I have much more time. I don’t feel so overwhelmed. I’m not worried about the time management part of things, and I’ll still have time for myself.
I’ll quickly run through this again.. I work as a software engineer, as a government subcontractor. Yesterday I found out that my contract has been renewed until 2025. My salary is at $120,000 per year and I have a mountain of debt that I am still working to pay off. My goal is to become debt free, save a lot of money, and then ball.
The absolute fastest way to pay this debt off would be to have two tech jobs, get my salary into the $160,000-$200,000 range, and then chunk all that extra margin at the debt.
However, government jobs are not compatible with OE. I would need to quit my current job to do that, and work a non-government job. It’s very likely that that would cause me to take a temporary pay cut until I could land that second job. But after that, my income would skyrocket, and the debt would be gone super fast…
This has a high reward potential but it does seem a bit risky. With the state of the job market and my current debt, is this a smart proposition, to work towards OE and just deal with the pay cut? Or should I keep doing what I’m doing, keep working my government job, and continue to whittle down my debt?