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Leaving it on the field. No more side projects.

14 pointsby bootilyover 11 years ago
I have wierdly come to a place in which I realize that side projects are bad for my career.<p>Years ago, they nurtured my talents, provided entertaining distraction from my day job and kept me curious.<p>After experiencing 2 years of burnout and coming fully back to life, I realize that side projects were partly to blame.<p>I think side projects taken too far not only is a source of exhaustion and stress but degrades my ability and desire to focus on my employers admittedly mundane work.<p>But since I left side projects behind I can see the quality of my paid work going sky high relative to 5 years ago.<p>No matter how smart, curious, creative, focused you are, there&#x27;s real danger in stretching yourself too thin.<p>Would like to hear others experiences with this.

3 comments

EdgarVeronaover 11 years ago
I had a similar experience to you: I used to do a ton of side projects. About three years ago, I started working at a job where I had a very long commute, and that combined with attempting to continue those side projects burned me out hard. I started leaving programming to what I did for my day job, and if I had the hankering to continue programming I&#x27;d just stay at work later.<p>After a couple of years of that, I admittedly feel mixed about it. I do feel like I&#x27;ve regained some of my lost personal life - though it was too late to save my marriage, particularly since in that first year or so after I came to the realization above I simply ended up working until late in the evening instead - deferring personal projects by simply replacing them with other work and not with maintaining my relationships. Once she left, I finally realized that I not only needed to cut out these side projects, but I also needed to maintain some kind of reasonable work-life balance. (it took me a long time to get to the point where I can accept that this failure of mine caused the dissolution of our marriage - I always viewed my programming and work as a way of making sure that there would always be food at the table and that she&#x27;d always be able to do whatever she wanted, but in retrospect it wasn&#x27;t worth much when she was the only one sitting at that table, and when it didn&#x27;t seem like she had a partner at all. It took me a long time to be able to say that.)<p>I now feel a bit less burnt out, and have a desire to start side projects again - but at the same time, I don&#x27;t want to go back to spoiling the rest of my life for it. I honestly can&#x27;t figure out how I can resolve the three and still have time to sleep.<p>So anyways, I sympathize with your situation. Sadly, I don&#x27;t have any good answers. All I know is that there must be a way to find a good balance, and that I have thus far been unable to find it - and I don&#x27;t know about you, but my failure to do so has cost me a great deal.
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a3nover 11 years ago
There is also the danger of forgetting what the sky looks like and what normal people sound like.
veqwjijtd4over 11 years ago
the way I see it, my side projects are my career. My paid work is just what I do to keep the lights on.