Yes, I do have a full-time job, and I even enjoy it, but it doesn’t pay enough to survive in this hellscape of a world we live in. I lack the college degree required to get almost any decent-paying job (plus my last job hunt took MONTHS to get a lead), I don’t have the skills or originality to become an online content creator, nor the artistry or patience to create and sell trinkets on Etsy (plus, that would require an initial investment which I simply do not have). Should I set up a GoFundMe? OnlyFans? I wouldn’t really be offering anything except a charity basket/collection plate so that feels dishonest at best. Idk, I’m quite literally having a breakdown because I’m probably going to lose my car soon, and then my job, and then my apartment, and then my life. Any help at all would be appreciated. Thank you

  • 0000000000000000000@discuss.tchncs.de
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    2 months ago

    Right now I’m unemployed and I know it sucks having no money. Reading your story makes me realise that I’m not doing that bad but also scares me, no wonder I don’t have a job or a car, or my own place to live. I just couldn’t survive.

  • Bear@lemmynsfw.com
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    2 months ago

    Just like everybody else. You pick yourself up by your own boot straps, grab the ankles, and offer yourself to your wealthy betters. Next question.

  • mommykink@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Step 1: Go to any hardware store and buy a 16oz claw hammer and a 25’ measuring tape.

    Step 2: drive around anywhere you know of new housing construction happening near you

    Step 3: Find the project manager and ask if they’re looking to hire help (if you live in North America, they are).

    Step 4: Keep your head down, show up sober every day and you’ll already be placing yourself in the top 10% of your new career field.

    I did this exact thing for much of my early 20s (less than a decade ago) in 41 of the lower 48 states and lived a comfortable enough life

  • TheFinn@discuss.tchncs.de
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    2 months ago

    Try pooling your resources with others. I know my experience was from a long time ago but this is how I see people making it work now as well.

    I had roommates for several years after school. It should have been even longer but I had to get married early like a dumbass. If you can at all, use that time to save what you can.

    While you’re doing that, get experience and connections at work. People will come and go and it’ll be helpful to have people you can reach out to that know you enjoy your work and see that you’re good at it.

    Most companies don’t provide good growth opportunities from within so every couple years, look at making a move. My biggest pay jumps have occurred this way.

    Don’t be afraid to apply for positions that you might feel are just out of reach. Having connections that can vouch for you and help you with your resume are very valuable for these.

    Along the way, don’t pass up your employer’s retirement matching, and save as much as you can. Since you don’t have a degree, look for certifications in your industry or take advantage of any help your employer can provide with tuition for college. Don’t be afraid to do it slowly if you have to.

    I know I had a lot of help getting opportunities but it was always on me to make the most of them. Good luck, I hope you make it where want to be.

  • Smokeydope@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    So here’s some things to think about that may help you out.

    The biggest thing you can do to help yourself financially is to cut down on expenses and work your way out of any debts you have.

    Take a look at your bank account activity and just write down how much percentage of your monthly income is going where. If you have monthly entertainment subscriptions like Netflix or patreons multiply that sub cost by twelve and ask yourself if its worth paying $ each year. Cut down on your spending as much as possible dont buy anything unless you really need it.

    What I’m going to say next is going to be controversial especially among the lemmy crowd, but its a way to financial freedom you might not have considered.

    Your biggest expense is almost certainly rent to your appartment. Take a look at how much money your paying to your landlord each month, and ask yourself how your financial life would look if you instead poketed that money and paid yourself the “rent”. If you were your own landlord.

    The secret is, your car can be a home that you own. Yes you heard me right, I’m suggesting that you move out of your apartment into your car while still working and pay yourself all that rent money, use it towards working off any debts you may have and pay off the car loan. After all your debts are paid and you own your car you build up a nest egg of 3-6k and set it aside. After that you are financially set compared to most people living paycheck to paycheck in their appartments and the world is your oyster.

    The sad reality is that many people every day especially the elderly living on meager SS are forced to choose between paying rent or starving to death have been lead down that path of living in their car with no choice in the matter and little time to physically or psychologically prepare after the eviction. Yet they manage to find the mental strength to endure, adapt, and thrive. I invite you to check out the YouTube channel cheaprvliving hosted by Bob wells. He does interviews with vandwellers who are more often than not older people fallen on hard times and shares their stories and builds. As well as practical guides to everything you want to know like how to take baths and use the bathroom and generate power for basic appliances and AC.

    • PotentialProblem@sh.itjust.works
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      2 months ago

      One thing to note about living in your car… not having an address shows up an awful lot. You even need one to register your car usually. I was living on the road for awhile and used a mailing service for most things combined with a family members address as my official address.

  • Hikermick@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Hard to offer any advice without knowing much about you. Have you told your employer about your situation? If you enjoy your job I’ll bet it shows and you’re good at it. If it’s a big company there may not be much they can do as they have to treat everyone equally. Maybe they can help you find someone to carpool with. Is public transportation an option? You can save A LOT of money that way. As others have said, if you can find a roommate that helps obviously. If where you live is expensive don’t rule out relocating.

    Just know you are not alone when you are struggling. Do what you have to do, your resourcefulness may surprise you. Despite what you’ll read online it’s not always a cakewalk no matter what decade it is. When I graduated unemployment was 10% and minimum wage jobs were the norm. I lived with 8 people in an inner city house and often ate out of a dumpster. It taught me to be frugal and how to keep an eye out for opportunity. I could blather on about my own experiences but they don’t work for everybody. If I could offer one piece of advice that does, know that the people you meet are the gateway to opportunity good and bad. You sound like you have a positive attitude. This will take you farther in life than any college degree. My very best to you

  • weeeeum@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Learn to save money. Not as in “don’t buy a 5$ coffee, millennial” but fixing things.

    I’m kind of a DIY guy and it’s saved me a lot of money at random times. Knowing how to safely replace an outlet, a power supply for the dish washer, various little repairs on the car, etc. It might not save a lot though since you’re renting.

    Also, the United States is over educated in the wrong fields. A lot of trades are desperate for competent workers, and are willing to pay good money for it. Due to the collective societal brainwashing of “work white collar or you are stupid” became a self fulfilling prophecy, there are few left who do good work

    Even if you don’t have money for classes, you can save enough for the most basic of tools and start practicing until you can try for a job.

    Libraries are also a valuable source of knowledge for begining a new career.

  • EvacuateSoul@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Reach out if you’re interested in blue collar work. I’ll give you my number and you can call even. I can advise from personal experience on truck driving, water/wastewater treatment careers, or railroad work.

    Truck driving has the benefit of being able to cut expenses to near zero by going over the road if you have few obligations. Getting a cushion this way makes settling down and going local much easier, even though I make more local than I ever did over the road.

    I don’t haul freight anymore either, and I don’t think that’s a long-term good prospect. Blue collar jobs where you work with the truck but have onsite work with it are a bit more resilient against automation I believe. Think wastewater cleaning, railroad, lineman, heavy haul, etc.

    • afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      water/wastewater treatment careers,

      I been saying this for almost as long as I have been in the all-things-waste sector. If you don’t know what to do with your life consider this. It’s a huge field from air scrubbers, to ground water remediation, to industrial scrap, to feces, to recycling, to solvent recovery, to chemical waste processing, to trash incinerators, to pulping equipment, and heck even regular HVAC falls under it sometimes.

      Everyone shits and everyone makes garbage. As long as humans are still around someone is going to have to deal with that fact. And if there aren’t humans around you won’t have to worry about a job.

      Every working day of my life I choose to make the world a slightly cleaner place, I am harder to fire than a normal civil servant, get paid well, and always have the most badass stories of my friend-group. Most people can’t talk about the time they came up with the ideas to fight a frozen shitberg with a blowtorches for example.

      There are a lot of ways to break in. If I was starting fresh I would probably apply for government jobs at a facility, start entry-level, and let them pay to train me. I came in as an engineer at a small contractor.

  • UltraGiGaGigantic@lemm.ee
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    2 months ago

    Lower your standards until they fit your new forever.

    In all seriousness I would apply for state and government jobs. Often you can setup an account on your state’s website and apply to a to a ton of jobs they have open all in the same go.

  • rsuri@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Look into switching jobs. Unemployment is on the low end. People who switch jobs tend to make more money, and it’s easier to get a high-paying job when you have a job already because employers can’t help but think more highly of you if someone else is wiling to employ you.

    Depending on what you do a recruiter or staffing agency may help. What’s worked best for me is posting an updated linkedin profile with keywords that recuriters will look for that relate to buzzwords for your job. Remember recruiters are typically trained as salespeople and may not know much about your actual job, they just look for words. Put in that you’re looking for work (but only show it to recruiters) and see if anyone bites.

  • rayyy@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    If you have friends and family that you don’t want to leave there are options. Everyone has a skill or can learn one. You might want to be a companion for an older person who needs assistance. Try to network with friends and family. Let people know you will help and want to work. Get rid of things that cost money but don’t save you money but keep a basic smart phone. Change your pastimes. Learn to forage, garden or build things. Many people look for helpers. Many people are eager to help and teach - find them. Meet strangers in friendly environments - you can network with those people. Go to free events. Volunteer - but be picky and don’t let anyone use you. If possible volunteer at a local garden - you can get food in return for helping. Co-ops pay people a modest amount and you can network there. Above all, keep busy to open doors and ward off the anxiety.

  • Varyk@sh.itjust.works
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    2 months ago

    I live abroad. If you have the money to survive the US for a month, you can survive for many months abroad.

    Getting certified as an English teacher takes a few days, and you’ll be saving $1 to $2,000 a month after living expenses in a lot of countries.

    No degree or skills outside of native English speaker required.

    If you don’t want to travel or teach, cheap RVs + 24 hour fitness subscription for showers is a very comfortable lifestyle that cuts rent out of the equation.

    If $4,000 is too much for the RV, you can find an SUV for half the price in suburbs outside of larger cities and throw a memory foam mattress in the back.

    If it took you months to find a job, I’d look outside of where you are.

    Search classifieds in other cities and be willing to move if the city you’re in isn’t serving your needs.

    I do recommend moving out of the country rather than the state though.

    Real quick to give you an idea of the costs of living abroad; siam reap, Cambodia is 3$ a day for a shared hostel, 8$ and up a day for a private room, utilities included, food will cost you less than $5 a day and if you cook for yourself, food’ll cost a dollar a day.

    Very easy and cheap way to get some breathing room while you figure out what to do next.

    There are many free and inexpensive certification programs that you can do online without a degree that you’ll be able to turn into better job prospects.

    • Crackhappy@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      While I do appreciate that you are correct, the idea of up and moving to a new country is absolutely petrifying to most people. I have the wherewithal and knowledge to move to pretty much anywhere, but I don’t because I would be too far away from my family.

      • Varyk@sh.itjust.works
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        2 months ago

        Or a new city, or a new job.

        For you specifically, family connections are at the top of your mind, but for OP it sounds like surviving is at the top of their mind right now.

        Most people have a comfort zone, but if the alternative to trying something new is throwing everything away, dip a toe outside of your comfort zone.

        Enough people have asked for help and taken me up on it that I don’t stop trying to help people when they ask for it.

        Humans are conservative, but enough of them have the wherewithal or are forced into circumstances where they have to take the first step into the unknown.

        Living abroad specifically is so much more comfortable than living(struggling) in the US, and there are so many ways to do it easily.

        Fuck that rat race shit.

              • Varyk@sh.itjust.works
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                2 months ago

                My suggestion of

                1. getting certified and moving somewhere near or far away with greater opportunity/lower cost, providing a suitable budget example

                versus you saying

                1. moving is scary?

                I’d rather you not equivocate those positions.

                OP can benefit from concrete options and support, not detractions.

  • viking@infosec.pub
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    2 months ago

    Get yourself a TEFL certificate (168 teaching hours, whatever you can find for cheap) and teach English in a third world country. Schools pay quite well to have a foreign face on their website, and the cost of living will be peanuts. That certificate cost less than 100 bucks, you’ll find a million of vouchers everywhere, and it takes maybe 4-6 weeks to complete.

    Some of the highest paying countries like China or Korea require a bachelor’s degree (any, really) on top of the certificate, but others such as Thailand, Indonesia, or Vietnam don’t.

    With the money you make there you could then get an online degree from a properly accredited university in a discipline you care for (or if you end up enjoying teaching, that would open the door to some other countries). Pro tip: Look for degrees outside of the US, it’s way cheaper, and tuition in English is quite common even in non-native English countries. Personally I went for a UK degree since it’s a first world country with a good education record. Paid around 18k for a 3 year program including travel expenses for a 2 week residency. The same in the US would have set me back 60-80k easily.

  • sunbrrnslapper@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    I lived for years without a car and then when I did get one, I bought a super shitty one in cash ($650 20 years ago). If you are able to get out from a car payment, that could free up some cash.

    During other lean times, I’ve gotten rid of entertainment experiences like internet, Netflix, cable, etc. and used the public library to fill the gap. And during one extreme period, I held 3 not classy jobs (like 50 hrs/wk) to make ends meet. Not sure what the economy is like in your area, but the McDonald’s by my house pays $20/hr, which can add up on top of another job.

    If you can get yourself pointed in the right direction, you should consider taking that moment to think about how to position yourself for the future. There are some decent online degree programs (WGU is very affordable and can be done around full-time jobs), which may be worth a small amount of debt. Obviously this is not a “follow your passion” moment - get a degree in something that will make getting a job easier or increase your income. I made the mistake of getting my undergrad in philosophy, which made me basically unhireable. So I later got an MBA, which opened a lot of doors. This was an expensive and time consuming path - hopefully you can learn from my error.

    I also want to call out that it can be a heap of work, so if you are feeling tired and overwhelmed, that isn’t unusual (or a shortcomg on your part).

    Hang in there, you got this.