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| | [Ask] Should I save up money or follow my dreams | | 7 points by emiunet on July 15, 2013 | hide | past | favorite | 4 comments | | I'm 28, an ordinary engineer (don't know how to do business) from an average family (nothing to inherit). I've been working for 6 years but saving only the last 2 (before that I had to pay my master degree school fee myself).
Now, everything seems to be hang somewhere in the middle for me. I have money but not enough to buy house and settle down. That means I'll need to continue working and saving as much as I can.
Yet the youth part in me still wants to study further, learn new things, explore new places, meet new people, visit as many countries as possible.. That is usually not cheap and difficult to save money.
I can't decide which desire is stronger.
Is anyone in the same situation? and what would you do? |
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-You're doing pretty well (in this economy that is chewing people up and spitting people out), if you have time to think in broad strokes about your future this way. Reflect & be grateful for that, I am similar, and try to often
-Whether you should settle down or not is really more about family/relationship progression right? If you've found the right person and you feel like you're ready to settle down, then settle down. If that isn't the case for you yet, and you're single, then there's nothing holding you to physical location other than family, which is certainly an advantage when it comes to traveling spontaneously or taking less-than-stable actions.
-The youthful part in you shouldn't be held back by anything. With the vast expanse of the internet, there is SO MUCH that you can learn. To address them in order
1. Study further - Depends on what you want to study, but enroll in some of the open courseware stuff, and learn away! Or just pick a thing, and start actively learning about it
2. Learn new things - Similar to 1, pick a new thing, start learning it, and actually utilize it to change yourself (like if you decide to pick up cooking, start actually cooking daily -- that'll make lasting change)
3. Explore new places -- This is tied into travel, if you want to travel, then start using those vacation days! You can even do 1-2 day trips (weekend) to places like Canada over the weekend to start out, little mini vacations.If you want to uproot yourself (of course this depends on #1) -- do it! I would first try moving with the company you're with now (see if they do overseas or placements/rotational stuff) -- or try and find a new job abroad. It would be great to have something set up BEFORE you leap, but if it's really killing you to not be out there experiencing the world, then just go, and try and apply for jobs or get work when you get there
4. Meeting new people - This one is hard once you get out of college/high school. Usually (unfortunately), work is the easiest way to really get to know someone (spend a large amount of time around them), but outside of that, you have to take to hobbies. Pick up a hobby (maybe bowling? something more active?), go to a wine-tasting class (something over long periods of time, so that you really get a chance to socially interact), join a church, etc.
Also you might want to cater to that youth-urges while you're still young.