I'm not in a good place mentally.<p>The pandemic has taken a massive toll on my mental health. Not only because I can't socialize like I did before, but also because I had to stop practicing my sport. My sport was one of the main things that kept me sane. I work out at home now, but it's nowhere near the same thing as going to practice 3-4 times a week.<p>On top of that, my wife left me in January before the pandemic hit. We're now going through the legal stuff, which is pretty stressful.<p>And I'm potentially dealing with some health issues. Still waiting for an appointment with my primary care provider.<p>I'm doing therapy. It's been keeping me barely sane. My weekly therapy session is the thing I look forward to the most during the week.<p>I'm a senior engineer at a large tech company. I'm paid a very handsome salary and quite a lot in RSUs to care about some of their systems. Given my position as senior, I'm expected to make big, important decisions, and to mentor people in the team.<p>I can't do any of that right now. I've been feeling like I'm scamming the company, because there have been entire weeks where I literally didn't work. And it's not because I don't want to, but I sit in front of my laptop and feel totally overwhelmed by everything and completely blocked mentally. My manager is actually aware of that and has been very understanding, but I still feel really bad about it.<p>I don't want to quit to take time off though. I feel like that'd be worse, and I'd probably just spend my days in bed not doing anything. I can still code - I do my own coding in the evenings, and that's been going quite well (nothing that will make me money though). I just can't be expected to <i>care</i> about stuff and to be involved as if my life depended on the services we build. There's no space in my head for that.<p>If I could get a job where I'm basically assigned tasks to code things to spec, done, next, that'd be perfect.<p>Does that even exist though?
> I can't do any of that right now. I've been feeling like I'm scamming the company, because there have been entire weeks where I literally didn't work.<p>Don't be too hard on yourself. A lot lf people are going through this. Some people are really struggling with wfh, others have multiple kids at home and can only work at 20% because they just have no time or energy left. Others study with mental health problems. And finally, others have experienced serious strains with their SOs due to being locked in together for so long (which might be worse than actually splitting). My point is, this is the reality for now, we are all aware of this, and I'm guessing your boss is banking on you being able to go back to normal after the pandemic is over.<p>Beyond that, what helped me is to think of the people that depend on you. Whoever you are or should be mentoring is an actual human being that depends in one way or another on you. Same for your coworkers and boss (although. "coworkers" is such a vague word in a big corp). So don't do it for the salary, do it for them. Keep doing therapy, keep going on ine day at a time , there's a light at the end of the tunnel.<p>ps: what was the sport? rock climbing, swimming, soccer?(just curious about what hobbies can i take once this is over)
I'm sorry. Reading this is like looking into a mirror. I am not going to say that I know how you feel. I just want you to know that so when I say that I am sorry, I am deeply sorry. I don't know what the answer is because I'm still going through it right now. Some things that I'm lucky enough to have that have helped me are my dog, family, friends and a change of environment. If you ever want to talk I am available.<p>I don't know if a job like that exists but take care of yourself. Take care of yourself, aggressively, like you are worth being taken care of, because you are.
You are not the only one having trouble functioning during the pandemic. Your manager may be "understanding" because others are performing worse.<p>When a heterosexual couple divorce, the wife typically takes a big hit financially and the husband typically takes a big hit emotionally and socially. I am hearing that the combination of divorce and pandemic has really nuked your social and emotional life and you have no idea how to rebuild it.<p>I think you look forward to therapy because it's someone to talk with about personal stuff and it's your only outlet currently for that.<p>Let me also suggest that you may need to work on cleaning your house. If your wife was primarily the person who did the housework and you are now working from home and not really cleaning it, that could account for your health issues to some degree and your inability to focus.<p>Clean your house. Get some social outlets. Put off a decision about your job until you have a handle on those two things.
I separated from a high paying job where I literally didn’t do anything and was severely micromanaged. There were several factors to account for that scenario including fragility of the software product, fragility of the work requirements, challenge communicating tasks, and so forth. So I drove to work everyday and sat there, but because of the micromanagement I had to toggle the mouse all day to appear active on the computer.<p>Then COVID and I got to do the same from home. I missed my coworkers because the people I worked with were great, but considering the work I was actually doing it was better being at home. I could toggle the mouse while holding long conversations with the wife or do more entertaining things on my personal computer at the same time.<p>This left a lot of insecurity and depression about the employment. I never became a software developer for the money, but because I like to build things. I wasn’t doing anything enjoyable and felt the roof could cave in at any minute.<p>Now I am away on a military deployment where I am often very busy. I have a team to manage and a great many things to produce. I am away from the family for many months but this change of environment is so great for the mental health. I can directly and measurably see the results of my teams productivity.<p>Am I concerned though. Military deployments are temporary. I will have to go back to that which was so depressing. I have been building a side project. I am thinking of turning this into a business when I return, which is scary. I am a developer, not a business person.
There definitely does exist less stressful software engineering jobs where you won't have to make big, important decisions or mentor other people. Some web dev agencies/consulting companies can actually be very nice to work at, for example, since you'll often get to work on greenfields projects. Try looking at smaller companies or maybe governmental or non-profit companies.<p>On a coping note: prioritize reducing your stress/anxiety in whatever (healthy) you can even if you feel guilty for not getting enough work done. For myself, I've had to do things like force myself to go for a walk every afternoon even if I hadn't completed all my tasks for the day yet, shut my computer off at a certain time, visit family over the weekend even if I feel like I need to stay at home and "catch up" on work, etc.
I've been going through a similar, though I'm guessing milder, thing this year. I'm also not senior but here's a few things I've found very helpful:<p>1) Be explicit about what you can and can't do and tell your manager and team if you're comfortable doing so. I found this helpful for a few reasons. First I felt less bad for ignoring or failing at certain things because I knew I was still delivering in other areas. Second it made it easier for my manager to work around as they knew what I could handle and what they needed to pull in help for. Lastly, and most importantly, when I focused on the tasks I knew I could do I felt far more in control and my anxiety levels would go down significantly.<p>2) Take time off if you can. I'm fortunate in that I get a lot of sick leave and my manager encouraged me to take it. Quitting comes with a lot of stress but just having a week or two off can really help.<p>3) Read Feeling Good by David Burns and work through the exercises. It's a book explaining Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) and I've personally found it really helpful so far.
Consider taking unpaid time off and recover.<p>I work for a large company in the US. We have both unpaid FMLA and unpaid time off. The difference is that with FMLA the company still subsidizes health insurance to some degree. If you are in the US, your company has the FMLA option.<p>One of my coworkers (a very senior manager) is in Germany and has a serious family issue. He has been working part time for a while at a reduced salary.<p>How many years do you have in career? 10 years or more? If you take 6 months off, will that matter in the long run? Won't it be better if you don't have work stress on top of everything else?<p>>If I could get a job where I'm basically assigned tasks to code things to spec, done, next, that'd be perfect.<p>There's no guarantee that a job that starts like that will stay like that. All it takes is one manager to decide that you will get more responsibility and you are back to what you were trying to avoid.
Hi watermelon59 what are your interests? I host a club where we talk about tech/design/literature. We typically have meetings every 2 weeks. We would love to have you join the discussion if just to listen or give the software perspective :)
Find us on thepolymathclub.com<p>Our next meeting is on cookies/tracking, and the one after that is on “what is intelligence?”
It’s a chill environment- jump in anytime (or anyone else reading this post :))<p>-Jane
@watermelon59 I appreciate your genuine honest approach, if you need to connect and talk with someone with unique perspective and you wanna just express yourself, let me know.. You can hit me up and lets just talk, i might not have specific details but i think what your looking for is possibly bit of advise and someone to connect while expressing. Anyways, if not all good, just attempting to align intentions. Thanks again for the post! #TheBradyMentality
It sounds like quitting to take a less stressful (but probably less well paid) job would be a permanent solution to a temporary problem.<p>I would think seriously about taking some sick leave. Work a bit on your evening projects during the day. Get plenty of sleep and exercise in fresh air. Switch off the news and listen to classical music instead. Maybe this sounds lame but I did this when I was going through a rough patch and my mental health rebounded.<p>Good luck!
First, make your health (not a job) your top priority. You only have one life. Jobs come and go.<p>Also, investigate these today:<p>* Short-term and long-term disability benefits you may have.<p>* Unpaid FMLA leave you can take.<p>* Ask therapist about potential options.<p>* Ask therapist about increasing therapy sessions to > 1x/week.<p>* Walk outside. Several times a day, if you want.
I was in your shoes about 2.5 years ago. I quit my highpaying job and its been fun for awhile, but since the pandemic hit I'm finding zero work. I keep getting passed over after going through all the hoops of tech interviewing. It's exhausting.<p>One thing you should talk to your doctor about is temporary leave of absence. I took 3 months off although it wasn't nearly enough it was enough to get my shit straight. I quit shortly after because corporate America is a toxic shithole especially for people like us with mental health issues.<p>Even if you quit and worked part time, the only real option out there is upwork. Pay is crap and you're competing with India.<p>I would say find a way to stay where you are until this pandemic nonsense is over.
I do a lot of hiring in this field. I have zero interest in anyone who changes jobs regularly. This might sound mean, but I promise I mean it as sincerely as possible. Grow up, focus on your life, and stop worrying about the things you can't change. You got to where you are for a reason. People rely on you. The first thing you should do is work extra hours to make up for the slacking. You will feel good. You also need to take care of yourself. A proper diet and exercise is extremely important. After that, get a wholesome hobby you can pour yourself into. Master something.<p>Good luck. Honestly