Kelly Lynn Martin wrote:
> 
> On Thu, 07 Oct 1999 09:01:09 +0800, "Deidre L. Calarco" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
> 
> >It wasn't the reason I decided not to go into programming, but it may
> >be part of the reason I stopped dabbling in it.  I changed my major
> >from computer science to architecture junior year because I was sick
> >of pulling all-nighters in the computer centers and didn't feel like
> >I was obsessed enough to be a really good programmer.
> 
> This is a lot of the reason I got out of programming too.  I found
> that it was getting harder and harder for me to get into "the zone"
> that I needed to be in in order to really program well.
> 
> For me, though, the issue wasn't creativity, it was a need to do
> something that "mattered" more than twiddling bits on a computer.

Hmm. I think I may be hitting this stage now. Sometimes I think I can
feel myself burning out, and that I should get out and do something
completely different. Perhaps I should take the current crisis as a
signal to do it - I was hoping to get to a more financially secure
position first though. Sometimes I just wonder if I need more
interesting programming work to do. I haven't had a project that I feel
motivated to pull multiple all-nighters on for ages.

-- 
Rachel

************
[EMAIL PROTECTED]   http://www.linuxchix.org

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