this post was submitted on 09 Nov 2023
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So I already quit my job…. But it’s not what you think.

I quit my job around two weeks ago at a company I was at for 4 years because I was miserable. I was having anxiety attacks because of the job so I decided to quit as I’m not a person who has ever suffered from mental illness. Since I left I’ve felt great.

I’ve found a job in the same industry they offered me similar pay but the company is much different and the things that would cause my panic attacks are non existent in this new work environment.

Since I’ve been off work though I’ve been looking into ways of starting my own business. My background is B2B sales and I’ve been very successful at it so with the right concept in a business I know I can succeed with the selling piece. Somewhere i can start is by doing photography professionally as I already do this on the side and if I dedicated my time 100% to this I feel like I’ll be able to meet my salary.

My dilemma is whether or not I should just take the leap and dive into my photography business or if I should take this other job in the same industry with less hours and work on my photography until I’m 100% sure I can do this.

I have five months of expenses saved up which leaves me with a little wiggle room at least.

I hate corporate life and my dream has always been to own my own business but at this stage I feel like there’s a lot of research I still need to do and setting up before getting going.

So what would you do in my shoes?

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[–] natd327@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago (5 children)

My advice. Take the other job. Continue photography as a side hustle on the weekends, and quit when you have a enough business and savings to feel comfortable for 6-12 months.

[–] Additional-Sock8980@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I would never encourage someone suffering from anxiety to start a business. It’s unbelievably stressful, lonely and life is unfair as an entrepreneur. People can sue you, make up false narratives, publicly review their opinions of you (anonymously).

Take another job and do you passion as a side job for now. If the anxiety goes away and can be set to one particular situation, then maybe go for it later. But it’s a head space that’s dangerous for those with mental health or dependency issues.

[–] teknosophy_com@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

Ha, I'm quite anxious and couldn't stand cubicle life. I have to be out there in the world, driving around, and seeing the results of my work!

[–] PoliticsAndWeed@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I agree with you but I am not a person who suffers from anxiety. The job I was at had a toxic work culture, poor leadership, public humiliation, unattainable goals, and extreme micro-management which I was able to handle fairly better than most people at the company. Before then i've never experienced anxiety and as soon as i left that work environment it all went away.

I also think it's different when you're working for yourself than working for someone else and a lot of the frustration I felt was that I was sitting at a desk 12 hours a day 7 days a week in a company that sees me at a number and I'm wasting my life away where as i can spend that time energy and effort on my own projects.

[–] Additional-Sock8980@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

Fair answer, then in that case go for it. Nothing worse than a bad situation.

Realise that the entrepreneurial journey in itself has a lot of anxiety, and then decide to embrace it by choice anyway!

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