Last job killed my love of IT, management beat it out of me. Wonderful company, demotivated by my manager from the first week. Couldn’t be a nicer guy, smartest tech I’ve ever met, Peter Principled his was into management.

Never been paid that much, took about every Friday off on PTO, total WFH, can’t say what my benefits cost but it wasn’t $100/mo. in total. My last job was half the pay and benefits, was so much happier. I think of that every time I read a comment about why companies need to pay more to satisfy us. Everyone should have a look at this. Had ALL that at my penultimate job, NONE at the most recent.

I feel so weird, especially at this time of life with a solid resume, interviewing for PT work at Lowe’s. Thinking I’ll be happier than a pig in shit spending 4 hours a day, just walking around helping people, doing what ever bullshit I’m asked to do. Looking to see how it goes, see if there are ways to work myself up to FT, better schedule, supervisor, whatever.

Thought about “retiring” to work in a hardware store to keep busy and fit, but not for a decade+. Excepting my credit card bills, and what my wife sends home to the Philippines, she makes enough to cover everything. Won’t take much to take the edge off.

I love hardware and tools and plants, about everything they sell. Hoping to learn a lot as well. Helping people is really satisfying to me, and I’m excellent at handling customers. LOL, I’m best with the angry ones, sometimes get them apologizing. :)

Need a sanity check, am I losing it!? Been through the worst depression of my life the past few years, hoping this will break me back into a normal state of mind.

EDIT: Got the job! Holy shit, the assistant manager is just like me! Dropped out of tech to take a minimum wage job at Lowe’s 8 years ago, now he’s at $90K. We’ve even done much of the same work in the IT space. “I did DSL for Bellsouth when it was new!” “Yep, did my time as a cable internet guy.”

Seems to be a lot of space and opportunity to move up. I’m going to knock this out the fucking park!

BONUS: Clerk at the shady gas station overhead me telling my neighbor about quitting IT and getting hired today. Guy ask me what I did in IT, gave him a run down. “Yeah. I was a web dev for 20-years, couldn’t take staring at a screen any more.”

  • Onno (VK6FLAB)@lemmy.radio
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    1 month ago

    Word of caution.

    I’ve gone down this route and discovered the phrase “you’re overqualified”, which is bandied around when you describe your previous experience.

    Don’t let this dissuade you, just keep it in mind.

    Good luck with the job interview!

    • shalafi@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 month ago

      That’s my only worry. Not sure how to downplay that or express that this really sounds like what I want (I think), even at the massive pay cut.

      • metaStatic@kbin.earth
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        1 month ago

        “Overqualified” just means they’re afraid you know your rights and can’t be exploited like someone fresh out of school.

        But if they’re already entertaining the idea of hiring someone in their 50’s I doubt you’ll hear it very often if at all.

        • shalafi@lemmy.worldOP
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          30 days ago

          No, it means you might run off at any moment when a higher paying job presents itself.

          I got the job! Going to hang in there, see where it leads. I was astounded at the mobility, up and lateral, that I can probably score.

          • IMALlama@lemmy.world
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            30 days ago

            I did retail a while ago. It wasn’t hard to climb if you’re moderately competent and not a d-bag. There is a somewhat low ceiling from what I recall. At my store at least, most of the people that reached upper level store managerial roles tended to do so by opening a new location.

      • vomitaur@slrpnk.net
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        1 month ago

        as an ex-IT currently working at Lowes, they don’t really give a shit about your qualifications, and probably won’t even ask. passing the drug test and background check is about the only qualifications that matter to them.

        • callouscomic@lemm.ee
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          1 month ago

          Quality of Life working from retail?

          Hahahahahahahahahahahahahahabahahahahahaha

          No no no sorry …hahahahahahahahahahahah HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA

          • KingJalopy @lemm.ee
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            1 month ago

            Some people actually enjoy that kind of work. I did it for a few years and I loved every minute of it. I enjoyed helping people and talking and organizing shelves/racks whatnot. If it paid better I’d probably still be doing it.

            • ShepherdPie@midwest.social
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              1 month ago

              Where’d you work though? This guy is going to work for Walmart equivalent of home improvement stores. After working at Walmart myself as a first job, I quickly grew to detest the place and quit twice before actually leaving (they talked me into staying the first time with a transfer and raise). It’s a soul sucking environment without the high pay and benefits that OP is walking away from. I hope it works out but the phrase “the grass is greener on the other side” exists for a reason.

              • KingJalopy @lemm.ee
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                1 month ago

                A place called Tuesday Morning. Kind of a old lady type place. They sold a bit of everything from clothes to knick knacks and home deco, but for like old people lol. Def no Lowe’s but I enjoyed it. Maybe OP should look for somewhere like Ace hardware instead?

                • CMLVI@lemmy.world
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                  1 month ago

                  Ace would be recommended. They hire people who want to help, Lowes hires people who have to pretend to want to help.

  • callouscomic@lemm.ee
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    1 month ago

    My story is literally the opposite. Working at places like Lowes and the shitty coworkers and management was my drive to finish school and get a better job.

    Every job can suck because of people who suck. Retail is definitely NOT better. I ain’t saying it’s worse, but it ain’t better.

    • asteriskeverything@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      Controversial but when it actually IS essentially just “for spending money” part time work, is retail that bad? You have the psychological benefits of seeing new people, having consistent relationships, helping others, physical activity, a routine, and anything else that working may bring to your social calendar. Oh and waaaay less responsibility and pressure.

      Cause it is essentially working for mental health reasons instead of financial. It is a lot easier to walk away then as soon as mental health is compromised!

      • shalafi@lemmy.worldOP
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        30 days ago

        I think the people hating on retail haven’t developed people skills because they’re young or simply can’t. I can flip an angry customer around in a few minutes, have them eating out of my hand.

        The secret sauce? Treat like as what they are, a human being coming to you for help, not pain-in-the-ass customer #43 for the day. Even the ones that start out angry quickly catch on that you’re on their side and doing your damnedest to help. If you’re fake, they can smell it.

        • IMALlama@lemmy.world
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          30 days ago

          People skills might be part of the equation, but that also applies to IT/dev work too - especially if you find yourself in any kind of lead (tech and/or managerial) position.

          I think hesitancy you’re seeing comes down to earnings potential and the fact that our society tends to look down on “low skill” work, especially retail.

        • asteriskeverything@lemmy.world
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          30 days ago

          I’m glad you have that particular skill, but it absolutely has very little to do with irate customers. That’s more like what makes it a shitty day at the job vs having a shitty job.

          Also idk how much variety of people you have had to meet in your career but I venture to guess they are all generally the same socioeconomic backgrounds, education, etc. When you work with the public it is different, the pool is larger and more random, you may learn new ways people can be fucking weird.

      • jpreston2005@lemmy.world
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        30 days ago

        If you’re financially stable enough to actually throw hands with that one customer (who will show up in your life eventually), then yeah, I can understand that.

    • IMALlama@lemmy.world
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      30 days ago

      I had a similar arc, but I would be lying if I said I wasn’t thinking about going back.

      I worked retail for two years post highschool. Looking at my coworkers, some of whom were in their 40s/50s and still at pretty low level positions, made me go to community college and then a four year school.

      14 years later working on software (dev, highly engaged/invested PO, now PM) and I either have a more clear-eyed worldview or a my company is starting to fall apart. I’m very over our command and control leadership that’s been touting the next new framework only to continue to command and control in that framework and then claim “that framework was actually bad, this new framework is good”. The battling between teams building basically the same things, but for their niches of the world, “how I want it” coming every which was as opposed to thinking about what we should be solving, everything being the top priority, actions mattering more than results, etc. Layer in process debt that goes back to the 1950s and technical debt going back to the 1980s. I know younger companies don’t have the later two problems, but from lurking in dev related communities for years everything else seems pretty common.

      At my retail job the worst I had to deal with was the occasional grouchy customer, which just meant calling a manager to deal with it if I couldn’t. We’re doing the best we can to stash away money. We’ve started doing math to say, “we might have to work longer in total, but if we were to take lower paying jobs at <age> this is what our finances would look like”.

  • NegativeLookBehind@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Dude, if you’re happy and can survive, you made the right move.

    Working in IT has me questioning my entire existence. In many ways, I envy you.

    • WindyRebel@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      As someone who just got his A+ certification and is looking for his first job in IT, why do/did you feel this way?

      I am doing a career switch from marketing/SEO which was…! Manipulating everything for people to sell shit and my job is beholden to whatever the FUCK Google wants to do today? No thanks!

      • Im_old@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        It depends A LOT what kind of IT career you do. If you are a sysadmin with a shitty manager/company you’ll hate it. If you do helpdesk you’ll hate the whole human race.

        But you can become devops, SRE, cloud engineer, architect, so you get all the fun at tinkering without the bullshit (most of the time, no job is perfect).

        • WindyRebel@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          Well, I’ll have to start out in help desk but I’ve done CS as a temp job before and it was kind of fun. I don’t want to do help desk forever though, and I understand just how DUMB some people can be. Like, wow… 🤣

          I dunno, I’m excited to get started in it and I don’t know what I want to specialize in yet.