On the one hand, tech is increasingly becoming hard to find a job in or feel certain about long-term ability to do so. On the other, the older I get the less envious I become of specialist doctors and their astronomical salaries, after factoring in the amount of debt, years spent not earning anything, and workloads I see them try to balance. And lawyers, dentist, pharmacists, etc. they no longer seem worth it at all.
Curious how others feel.
Nothing really changed. Ageism is still a hurdle. While I was in academia my industry contacts have gone stale. Agencies that used to source excellent contracts fail to connect with requirements which are overly specific, e.g. Java, or SAP, or whatever. Having a higher level of knowledge together with decades of experience is not competitive in face of outsourced resources from the big international consulting firms.
I have friends who work/worked for top law firms, consulting firms, some are medical doctors. Most are overworked, burnt out, frustrated with increasingly bureaucratic managements, facing relationship issues, nursing a variety of addictions.
My only piece of advice is: optimize your life for quality not income. Prioritize your health, happiness and relationships.
You're meeting sick contagious people all the time, and you get sick all the time. Just like daycare workers.
Canada has a ton of immigration, so you're 1 patient from getting TB or some other exotic airborne disease.
Ive known many lawyers. Ive considered it. Not too late, could combine it, be a lawyer for hackers and other IT.