@JLeslie “I doubt @KNOWITALL is talking about taking a job that harms people.”
I didn’t say she was, so this is irrelevant.
“It’s not like all well paying jobs are evil”
No, but the highest paying jobs probably are. So if salary is someone’s overriding criterion, the only thing standing between them and taking an evil job is their qualifications.
“it might simply be a job that isn’t very appealing to the person, or a job that has high pressure, or a crappy boss, or long hours, or extreme hours”
My job has high pressure, some of my bosses are crappy, and the hours can be both long and extreme. But I still like it and am happy with it (which just goes back to my original point, which is that we shouldn’t define “happiness” so narrowly as to think it requires everything to be gumdrops and lollipops).
@KNOWITALL “It’s very stressful and not often ‘fun’, but the rewards of my hard work and stress are that I can afford to help others. Plus I’m very good at it.”
I am also very good at my job, which is frequently stressful and not always fun. But my job is helping people, which means I don’t need my salary to be higher in order to help others. Plus, I am happy with it. The point is that “happiness” and “fun” are not the same thing, and I think the people who choose jobs that make them happy largely understand that (even lousy Millennials like myself).
In fact, I would challenge the premise that you’re not happy with your job. You’ve said nice things about your job in the past, and you like what it allows you to do for others in your free time. So it sounds to me like you have a job that provides both happiness and a high salary. My job will also provide that soon enough. but I’d choose it over a job that made me unhappy even if my salary was going to stay low.
@Patty_Melt “Work you enjoy can end up making you dislike something you enjoy simply because it makes demands of you which makes it lose its luster.”
This is an important point. If you take a hobby and make it a job, you could end up with a job that doesn’t make you happy even though you thought it would. And you might lose the ability to enjoy that hobby, making you unhappier still. This is another reason that we have to distinguish between “a job that makes you happy” on the one hand and “a job that is fun” or “a job that involves doing something you like doing for fun” on the other. They’re not necessarily the same thing, and people who expect them to be the same thing could end up very disappointed.