Career Growth



Would you move to a town of 4,000 people for a job that nearly doubles your salary?

I’m 29 and currently making around $62k in a city where I have friends, family and a pretty comfortable routine. I’ve been offered $108k plus a relocation bonus for a role in northern Nevada, but the town has around 4,000 people and the nearest proper airport is almost three hours away.

The job itself is a big step up and would give me management experience much earlier than I expected. The catch is that it’s fully onsite and they want someone who will stay at least two years. I looked at apartments and there’s basically one decent complex, a few houses and not much else nearby. I’m single, so I’d be moving there completely alone without even knowing anyone within driving distance.

Financially it feels stupid to turn down. Rent is cheap and I could finally build up some saved money instead of watching most of my paycheck disappear every month. But I keep wondering if two years in a place that isolated would mess with me more than I’m expecting.

Has anyone taken a great career opportunity somewhere they had zero interest in actually living? Did the job make the move worth it, or did you regret choosing salary over your current life?


Jobadvisor

This is the classic "money and career vs. youth and sanity" trade-off. Going from $62k in a city where your paycheck vanishes to $108k with cheap rent in an isolated town is a massive financial pivot. In a low-cost-of-living area, that jump will feel more like going from $62k to $140k in terms of actual disposable income.

At 29, you are in a prime position to take a calculated risk, but two years in a town of 4,000 people in northern Nevada—likely a mining, agricultural, or logistics hub—is a very specific kind of grind.

To help you weigh this, let's look at the cold math, the social tax, and how to frame the decision so you don't end up miserable.

The Career & Financial Case: Why You Say Yes

If you view this not as a permanent move, but as a 24-month professional deployment, the benefits are massive.

  • The Fast-Track Resume: Early management experience is incredibly hard to get. Landing it now means when you apply for your next job at 31, you are commanding manager-level salaries in major cities, rather than fighting to break out of individual contributor roles.

  • The Financial Launchpad: If you save the entire difference in salary, you could easily leave that town in two years with $50,000+ in cash, completely debt-free, with a robust investment portfolio or a down payment for a house.

  • A Defined Horizon: Two years is 104 weeks. It has a hard expiration date. Humans can tolerate almost any living situation if they know exactly when it ends.

The Social & Mental Tax: What to Expect

Do not romanticize a town of 4,000. It is not a cozy Gilmore Girls episode. You need to be brutally honest about the daily reality:

  • The Dating Pool is Microscopic: If you are single and looking for a partner, a town of this size—especially an isolated one in northern Nevada—offers almost zero dating scene for a 29-year-old. You will likely exhaust local dating apps in 48 hours.

  • The "Three-Hour" Trap: Being three hours from a major airport (likely Reno or Salt Lake City) means a weekend trip home or to see friends isn't a casual drive. It requires a six-hour round-trip commute just to board a plane. You will miss things back home.

  • The Bubble Effect: In small towns, your work life and personal life blend. You will run into your boss at the grocery store. Your coworkers will know who you are dating. There is very little privacy.

How to Decide: Three Rules of Engagement

If you are leaning toward taking the job, you should only do it if you can agree to these three conditions:

1. Give the Money a Specific Job

Do not move there just to let the extra cash sit in a checking account or get swallowed by online shopping because you're bored. Give the money a target.

"I am doing this to pay off my $20k student loans and save a $40k down payment for a condo back home." When you are staring at the walls of your apartment on a freezing Tuesday night in Nevada, you need a highly tangible "why" to keep you grounded.

2. Negotiate a "Look-See" Trip

Do not sign the contract until they fly you out there. Spend a weekend in the town. Eat at the diner, walk through the grocery store, drive past the one apartment complex, and look at the landscape. If your gut tightly clenches and you feel immediate dread, pay attention to that. There is a difference between "this will be a challenge" and "this will break my mental health."

3. Build a Strict "Escape Budget"

Use that relocation bonus and your new salary to fund regular, non-negotiable trips out of town. Plan a weekend in Reno, Salt Lake, or Las Vegas once a month. Book flights to see your friends. Having milestones on your calendar every 3 to 4 weeks will prevent the isolation from feeling like a prison sentence.

Ultimately, many people who take these "hardship" postings look back on them as the hardest, loneliest, but most financially transformative two years of their lives. They don't regret doing it, but they are incredibly glad they left when their time was up.

To help narrow this down, what is the biggest thing keeping you in your current city right now—is it a tight-knit friend group you see multiple times a week, or is it more about the general convenience and comfort of city life?


Good Careers for Starting Over at 40?


I don't think this is a sob story even though it does make ME feel like sobbing lol. From my late 20s to late 30s I was a writer. Actually I was more like a content creator. I was churning out fantasy LitRPG novels at a rate of about six per year and self-publishing shorts. I made enough to get by but never a ton. Even the worst performing of these books made a over a grand and the best performing made over 30k. Most were on the lower end of that range. As a result I probably averaged around 30k per year and supplemented my income bartending. I knew pretty quickly that I should get into something more stable but being able to work from home and make my own hours pre-covid was an amazing perk and publishing a book felt like buying a lottery ticket. I only needed one series to take off and then I would be set. It never happened, I washed out, and AI is decimating that field anyway. Now I'm staring down the barrel of 40 and I have no idea what to do. I have bachelor's degree in a field I've never worked in and have no real desire to either. Learning to code feels like it might be a wasted investment considering the way AI is progressing, same with those one year data analyst courses everyone was doing a while back. I look at out the job market and nothing really makes me think I want to do THAT. I don't know what specific advice I'm asking for, maybe just venting. If you have a job you love or have been in a similar situation let me know! Anything helps.


Jobadvisor


Good — that actually narrows things down a lot, because "no more school" and "use my writing" together point pretty clearly toward business/commercial writing rather than the literary side you were in. Here's where I'd point you, roughly ordered by how fast you could plausibly start earning:

1. Copywriting for small businesses / marketing agencies This is probably the closest match to what you already know how to do — you know how to hook a reader, write for a specific audience, and hit a deadline. Companies need website copy, email sequences, ad copy, product descriptions. Freelance market is crowded and AI-pressured here too, but agency or in-house copywriting jobs are different: they want someone who can take a messy brief, ask the right questions, and produce something on-brand — which is judgment, not just prose generation. Your self-publishing background (you literally A/B tested what made people buy your books) is a legitimate selling point here. Portfolio matters more than degree.

2. UX writing / content design Tech and SaaS companies need people to write the words inside apps — button labels, onboarding flows, error messages, help docs. It's underrated because it sounds boring but pays well and is currently one of the harder writing jobs to fully automate, since it requires understanding user flows and testing with real people, not just generating text. No coding required, though you'd want to learn the vocabulary (a few weeks of self-study, not a program).

3. Technical writing Software companies, healthcare, manufacturing, and finance all need people who can turn "how the thing works" into documentation a normal human can follow. This is one of the more AI-resistant writing jobs right now precisely because the hard part isn't the sentence-writing, it's interviewing engineers, understanding the product, and structuring information correctly — AI is bad at extracting accurate info from a confused SME in a meeting. Often no degree required if you can show writing samples; some technical writers land roles from a strong portfolio alone.

4. Grant writing Nonprofits, schools, and research institutions constantly need grant writers, and there's chronic demand because it's tedious and high-stakes (money on the line if you get facts wrong). Good pay for nonprofit-adjacent work, often remote or hybrid, and it rewards someone who can write persuasively under structure — which, again, is basically what you did writing series that had to hook readers within a chapter or two.

5. Corporate communications / internal comms Companies need someone to write the CEO's all-hands email, internal newsletters, policy explainers. Very people-adjacent (you'll be interviewing execs and translating), stable corporate salary, and it's a role AI struggles with because it requires organizational context and trust that a chatbot doesn't have.

A practical note on the AI fear across all of these: the writing jobs disappearing are the commodity ones — generic blog posts, low-stakes fiction, filler content. The ones surviving are the ones where someone has to gather information a machine can't easily get (interviewing a person, understanding a specific business) or where getting it wrong has real consequences (legal, financial, medical, brand reputation). That's actually a useful filter as you're looking at postings — ask "would getting this wrong matter to someone" as a rough gut check.

If it'd help, I can look at what actual openings in your area look like right now for any of these, or help you think through how to frame your book sales numbers and self-employment on a resume so it reads as an asset instead of something to explain away.


Who shouldn't be an RN?


Hello. I'm 18, and I just graduated from high school. Under pressure from my family, I applied for prerequisites for the Nurse program, as they failed to persuade me to another medical position.

A question for an RN:

  1. Did you want to be one?

  2. Do you like your job?

  3. Are there any specific indicators that can help you clearly determine that this job is not right for you?



Jobadvisor

First of all, take a deep breath. Graduating high school is a massive milestone, but it also comes with a lot of pressure—especially when family expectations clash with your own gut feelings. It is incredibly common to feel overwhelmed when being steered toward a career as intense as nursing.

To give you the honest, unfiltered perspective you need, let’s break down those questions from the viewpoint of registered nurses who have been in the trenches.

1. Did you want to be one?

If you ask a room of RNs this question, you will get two distinct groups:

  • The "Calling" Group: Those who knew from childhood they wanted to be nurses. They love science, human connection, and the fast-paced environment.

  • The "Accidental" Group: Those who stumbled into it for practical reasons—stable income, a 3-day workweek, or family pressure.

Many "accidental" nurses go on to have highly successful, fulfilling careers because they fell in love with a specific niche (like pediatrics, informatics, or research) once they got through school. However, starting prerequisites when you already feel forced and unenthusiastic makes an incredibly difficult academic path feel twice as heavy.

2. Do you like your job?

Most nurses have a complicated, love-hate relationship with their profession.

On one hand, the job security is unmatched, the schedule can offer great work-life balance (working three 12-hour shifts means four days off), and there is a deep, unmatched satisfaction in directly helping someone on their worst day.

On the other hand, bedside nursing can be physically exhausting, emotionally draining, and highly stressful. It involves dealing with understaffed shifts, difficult management, and patients or families who may be angry or aggressive. Many nurses love nursing but hate the healthcare system.

3. Clear Indicators That Nursing Is Not Right for You

Skills like inserting an IV or calculating medication dosages can be taught. But there are certain personality traits, boundaries, and coping styles that are very hard to change.

If any of the following apply to you, it is a very strong indicator that nursing may not be your path:

You Struggle with Severe Pre-Shift Anxiety or Catastrophizing

Nursing requires you to make rapid-fire decisions where a mistake could theoretically harm a patient. If you naturally struggle with severe anxiety, OCD, or a tendency to "catastrophize" (imagining the absolute worst-case scenario constantly), the high stakes of clinical care can amplify those mental health struggles significantly.

You Lack Natural Empathy (or "People Pleasing" Boundaries)

To survive as a nurse, you have to genuinely care about people—even when those people are being rude, messy, or ungrateful. Conversely, if you are a major "pushover" who cannot set firm boundaries, patients and toxic workplaces will burn you out in a matter of months. You need a unique mix of a soft heart and very thick skin.

You Mind Bodily Fluids and Intense Physical Labor

There is no avoiding the physical reality of the bedside. You will be on your feet for 12 hours. You will clean up feces, vomit, blood, sputum, and urine—regularly. If the thought of cleaning an adult patient's bodily fluids makes your stomach turn, nursing is going to be an uphill battle.

You Hate Unpredictability and Constant Interruption

If you thrive on a quiet, structured environment where you can focus on one task at a time without interruption, a hospital floor will feel like chaos. Nurses are constantly interrupted by alarms, call bells, doctors, and sudden patient declines. You have to be comfortable with pivoting your entire plan for the day in a split second.

What to Do Next

You are only 18. You have plenty of time to figure out your path, and you do not have to let your family dictate your entire future.

Before you completely walk away or commit to a multi-year degree, try to get some real-world exposure:

  • Shadow a nurse: Contact a local clinic or hospital and ask if you can shadow an RN for a day. Seeing the job in action is entirely different from reading about it.

  • Work as a CNA or Unit Clerk: Taking a class to become a Certified Nursing Assistant (CNA) takes only a few weeks. Working in this role will show you exactly what hospital life is like. If you hate being a CNA, you will likely not enjoy bedside nursing.

  • Explore non-bedside roles: Remember that nursing isn't just hospital bedsides. There are aesthetic nurses (Botox/skin clinics), school nurses, research nurses, and public health roles.

If your gut is screaming no, listen to it. It is much easier to have a difficult conversation with your family now than to spend years of your life and thousands of dollars on a career that makes you miserable.


Going to HR over improper write up?

I was recently injured and was ordered by my doctor to take 4 days off from work. I was scheduled to work 3 of those days, and used PTO. I came back to a write up for excessive absenteeism from my direct manager.

A few key details: it is illegal in my state to discipline employees for using their accrued sick time. The company uses a general PTO pool that satisfies the sick time law, so it counts as protected time. It is also company policy that disciplining an employee for calling in sick when they have PTO to use is considered harassment.

Should I go to HR over this? The fact that there’s a legality factor here and not just some interpersonal issue makes me think it makes sense to.


Jobadvisor

Yes, this is worth escalating to HR, and the legal angle is exactly why.

A few reasons this makes sense:

It's a paper trail problem, not just a feelings problem. A write-up for "excessive absenteeism" that's actually penalizing protected sick leave use isn't just unfair — it's the kind of documented action that could expose the company to real liability if it happens again or if you're later disciplined further (up to termination) partly based on this write-up. Getting it corrected or removed now protects you later.

You have unusually strong footing. Most people who feel wronged by a write-up are dealing with a judgment call or a "he-said-she-said." You're not — you have a doctor's order, PTO used for the exact days scheduled, a state law protecting that specific use of leave, and a company policy that explicitly labels what your manager did as harassment. That's about as clean a case as this gets.

This is a manager-training-or-malice issue, not a company-policy issue. Since company policy already prohibits this, HR's incentive is to fix it fast — a manager violating both state law and internal policy is a liability HR wants to correct quietly rather than have surface again.

A few practical notes as you approach it:

  • Bring documentation, not just an objection. The doctor's note/work restriction, your PTO records showing the days and hours used, the specific state statute (or at least that it exists — HR's employment counsel can confirm), and the internal policy language on harassment for PTO use.
  • Frame it factually, not emotionally. Something like: "I want to flag that this write-up appears to conflict with [state] sick leave protections and our internal policy on PTO-related harassment. Can we review and correct my file?" Let the facts carry the weight.
  • Ask specifically for the write-up to be rescinded/removed from your file, not just "reviewed." Get confirmation in writing (email) once it's resolved.
  • Keep a copy of everything — the write-up itself, your PTO records, and any email correspondence with HR — in case this isn't the end of it.

If HR doesn't resolve it or the manager retaliates further, that's when it'd be worth a brief consult with an employment attorney in your state (many do free initial consultations) — but going to HR first with clean documentation is the right first move here.

I'm not a lawyer, so if you want certainty on how your specific state's sick leave law applies, a quick call to your state's labor department or an employment attorney can confirm the details. But strategically, yes — go to HR, and go in prepared rather than just venting the situation to them.