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I Don't know what to do with my life

  • 19-04-2025 05:33PM
    #1
    Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,451 ✭✭✭


    I completed a PHD about 8 months ago, as you can imagine this took up a huge amount of my time as I working full time hours alongside it, a few months before I finished my studies I began a relationship, when my studies finished the relationship deepend and he filled up the space that had been occupied by my PHD. I started a part time job and was really winding down after a manic but exciting couple of years. The job is stressful and low pay, I dont see it as a long term thing, its just until I figure out how I can progress my career, gain experience and learn some new skills, im also saving, the goal was to save for myself and partner to eventually get our own place, I say saving, I probably have about 500 euro saved, we talked about moving in together but he didnt make any effort to make this happen, a red flag that I should of copped at the time. Out of nowhere my ex contacted me and ended our relationship, I am devastated and left picking up the pieces while he is living his best life. Im also left with a huge empty space in my life, living in a small town with no prospects and nothing going on but dereliction and grey buildings. Im late 30's, its too late for working holiday visas and my friends have all got small town mindsets with no drive, they wont even go for a few drinks or a meal on a weekend, all they want to do is stay home and watch television. I want fun, excitement, new experiences, meaningful relationships and hope for the future but I just cant seem to make any of this happen. My ex and I went travelling, we had similar interests and would do lots of fun things together, he quickly became my best friend but I dont even know who he is anymore, its like he switched over night, as I said im devastated and dont know where this leaves me. Id just love some advice, ideas on new goals to set or how to get out of this funk im in. I feel stagnant and lost at the same time. All my hopes and dreams for the future went up in flames when he dumped me.



Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 35,583 ✭✭✭✭NIMAN


    Surely with your PhD, the world is now your oyster?

    Perhaps it's time you upped and left, try a new challenge in a different town/city/country?

    Why stay in a grey, depressing when you are single and it's a big, exciting world out there?



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,306 ✭✭✭✭suvigirl


    Were you with him for less then 12 months? If so, you must have had plans for your future before you started seeing him? Maybe get back to whatever they were?



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,026 ✭✭✭YellowLead


    It sounds like it was less than a year of a relationship? So it shouldn’t have the power to spiral you.
    You don’t need a partner to go travelling - in fact travelling alone can really make people. Could be just what you need. Nothing stopping you except yourself. I know it’s hard when you’re older - but if you don’t do it now do you want to look back and 49 still in the same rut and wishing you had just had the balls? It sounds like you really need to get out of that small town!



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,451 ✭✭✭Airyfairy12


    Thanks everyone, it was a year and a half of a relationship, I should have mentioned that, my goals initially where to get my phd, a job and plan a life with my ex but as it turns out, he had different ideas. Im not sure where I could go or how I would even start the process of moving away somewhere, do I get a job first before I go or go and sus it out? Id consider the states maybe but I dont know how id go about it..



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,451 ✭✭✭Airyfairy12


    I wouldnt say im spiralling just hurt and navigating a difficult situation and heartbreak is heartbreak, whether it was 3 months or 10 years, it will bring up emotions. I dont want to go solo travelling, I dont have the money for that and I have work commitments, im not a 20 year old looking to go backpacking, I want to build a solid life for myself, if that means emigrating then of course thats an option I'll consider but its a long process to even start and most visas only extend to people under mid 30's. I dont speak other languages so that rules out most of Europe.



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,306 ✭✭✭✭suvigirl


    It doesn't really rule out Europe. Plenty of jobs where you only need English and can then gain another language while there. Is your qualification something that gives you plenty of options like that?

    I wouldn't rule out Solo travel, you don't have to back pack around Asia like a 20 yr old, there are people living all over the world, working remotely.

    Was it a very short PHD, I thought from your post that you started your relationship after you had started your. PHD, so you must have had some plans before you met him?



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19 blanchwill


    How long is it since the break up? If it is recent enough I would say just wait, your feelings will change in 6 or 12 months. There is no rush



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,466 ✭✭✭phormium


    Do you have to go abroad at all? Why not just move from the small grey town to one of the bigger cities in Ireland, any job opportunities there for you? That would be a start anyway, if you got a good job you could do the travel in your holidays rather than actually emigrate.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,385 ✭✭✭Princess Calla


    You're not spiralling you're grieving all the hopes and dreams you had (or thought you had) with your partner.

    It's a gut punch.

    You assume once you get to a certain age/point in life that the games and messing around stops and everything is "on the level". However he is entitled to change his mind too, he obviously wasn't into it as much as you were or else his feelings faded.

    It takes time, there's no magic wand to make the feelings disappear.

    I know you know all this yourself. I've seen you advising others, so I know you will get through it stronger.

    Give yourself time to regroup.

    I honestly don't think the confusion is all about the boy either...he's just the easier thing to focus on. I know myself once I finished my second degree the amount of "spare time" I had was overwhelming. The adrenaline of juggling everything wears off and you enter into a weird abyss of "what now".

    So you've two big "what now" things hitting you at once.

    A breakaway somewhere even a week in the sun or a solo hiking tour holiday whatever is your thing might be a good short term solution just to break your routine and give a bit of distance and perspective.

    Best of luck , I know you've got this!



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,026 ✭✭✭YellowLead


    Apologies - as you said ‘my ex and I went travelling’ it just sounded like something you either missed doing or wanted to continue.

    Countries like Germany, the Netherlands and the Nordics have lots of international companies where the working language is English so you don’t need the language at first. But you only need to consider those if there are less opportunities here for whatever field you did the PhD in. Did you have some sort of idea before heading into it, did they five advice, do you know what careers others went into? That’s really the first step. It’s going to be hard to make friends in a small town - but if you could get to a city that aspect would be easier. Grieving the end of the relationship will take time, and that’s okay.



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 35,583 ✭✭✭✭NIMAN


    The likes of Dubai etc are always looking for well educated English speakers to teach. I know a couple of folk whose kids are out teaching abroad, living a great life (if you believe they aren't lying) and earning a fortune.

    There's always a lot of Irish in most countries you'd move to, so probably wouldn't take long to fall in with some of those if you so wished?

    Or even a move within Ireland could be rejuvenating ? Move to Galway, Belfast, Derry, Limerick....plenty happening in those places to break the monotiety of your current location.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,511 ✭✭✭SuperBowserWorld


    Really simplify your life, drop all the baggage and belongings, physically and mentally, and just go. Travel light. Get a job in the UK, Europe, Middle East ....

    The goal is not to get the best job, the goal is to get out of your rut and get moving. Do not be afraid of failure or making an ass of your self or trying a different company, city, country.

    Just go.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,476 ✭✭✭hawley


    Unfortunately a lot of people are like this nowadays, especially since Covid. A lot of them just want to stay inside watching tv or on the Internet. I'm in my late forties and see how many of my friends have withdrawn into themselves. It's going to be just as bad in some other countries such as countries in Scandinavia and Northern Europe. I think that you'd be better off staying in Ireland but maybe move to a new location. Easier said than done with the costs of renting etc.

    Communication was the greatest fatality



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 48 charlessmith22


    You don't really seem too happy with any aspect of your life, you've posted about living in a depressing town before. You're highlighting the negatives in your life and seemingly not excited about the opportunities someone in your position has. There's plenty of places in Europe you'd survive with English and then pick up the language along the way. Even places like Malta, English is an official language and has a thriving job sector and large expat community.

    You're not going to come across well to a partner if you're overly reliant on them to fill huge voids in your life. Ideally a partner should be a cherry on top of your already happy life, not the sole or main point of happiness, that's huge pressure

    So before jumping back into another relationship I'd be sorting the other glaring issues you speak about, location, work and friendships.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,814 ✭✭✭Archduke Franz Ferdinand


    You say you’re late 30’s and have done your phd and that your friends are not interested in excitement etc and just want to stay at home. I’m assuming your friends are roughly in the same age bracket as yourself? Are these friends in relationships, married or have kids, if so they are at a different stage in life than you and you can’t really expect them to drop everything for you? Secondly, l don’t know what your phd was in but it’s highly unlikely you’ll get to use it in the small depressing town you mention. So as someone has suggested here, you’ll have to move, that’s if you want to use that phd?Life won’t come knocking on your door, it’s up to you to get out there. You were clever enough to get your PhD, lm sure you’re clever enough to know what you need to do. Good luck 👍



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,158 ✭✭✭CelticRambler


    Thread title : I Don't know what to do with my life

    Terms and conditions:

    I dont want to go solo travelling; I dont have the money for that … ; I have work commitments … ; emigrating […] its a long process to even start ... ; I dont speak other languages so that rules out most of Europe.

    Those are an awful lot of self-imposed restrictions that'll seriously hamper your objective of achieving anything "solid".

    From an administrative point of view, there is nothing stopping you from getting on a boat or a plane and emigrating to any one of the 26 other countries in the EU tomorrow. You don't need a job offer, you don't need a visa, you don't need to fill in any forms or justify the reason for your journey. You have a legal right to look for work from day one anywhere else in the EU, with or without a local address or any knowledge of the local language or customs.

    From a practical point of view, it's much easier to sign up for one of the many volunteer and seasonal work programmes (particularly common during the summer and autumn) that offer bed and board in exchange for blood, sweat and/or tears, ask little in the way of hard-and-fast qualifications, and put you side-by-side with other people looking for a change of direction in their lives.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 977 ✭✭✭mykrodot


    do something completely different! Travel and go Wwoofing (https://wwoof.net/). In other words you work for your bed and board and the company of other like minded people! Its a great thing to do after the breakup of a relationship, you are busy , working physically, but you also have new interesting people around you.

    You get to pick whatever country in the World you want to go to, you can move around i.e. do a month in one place, then move to another place. It is physical labour but sometimes that is part of the tonic, part of the cure, using our hands, making, fixing, growing, creating.

    I know loads of people who have done it, including my daughter, she did it in New Zealand, best experience ever (and I went out to visit her!)



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,502 ✭✭✭✭LambshankRedemption


     I dont speak other languages so that rules out most of Europe.

    No it doesn't. I lived in central europe working for an American multinational for 4 years. My colleagues who were living there were a cosmopolitan mix of Italian, Irish, Scottish, American, Macedonian, Slovak and Ukranian. Most spoke little to none of the local language and got around fine.

    If not going abroad, surely now that you have a PhD, you can pretty much walk into any job in a related field. Have you looked for work in one of the cities?

    Post edited by LambshankRedemption on


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,038 ✭✭✭Ficheall


    A PhD absolutely does not allow you to just walk into a job, any more than speaking only English prevents you from travelling around Europe.

    OP, you haven't said what field you're in, but since you did the PhD, it's not unlikely you're looking to get into academia. This is the time of year when a lot of academic jobs are advertised for September so they can process everything before people go on holiday in July. Do up a CV, drop in a few applications, have a look at what opportunities are out there - dream a little! Check all the unis' vacancies - the TUs are a more likely bet. Also have a look through jobs.ac.uk - they even speak English over there..

    You'll get over your man in time when you've left the small town.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 975 ✭✭✭n.d.os


    Get on a dating site. A friend of mine separated a few months ago and is now in a happy new relationship after meeting a guy online. I've never used them as I'm happily married but I expect you can input your information and meet people in the same boat as you. There's so many fish in the sea and it might help you find someone at a similar crossroads in their life.



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 646 ✭✭✭Avatar in the Post


    Can you let us know what your PhD is in?

    I second (or 4th/5th at this stage) that you don’t need another language to work in Europe, particularly for US multinationals. Although, picking up the language of your host state will improve your options.

    Then there’s the UK.

    In time… online dating sounds plausible.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,502 ✭✭✭✭LambshankRedemption


    A PhD absolutely does not allow you to just walk into a job

    Presumably that was directed at me. I didn't say they could walk into any job, I said pretty much any job in their field.

    The country is at full employment, no-one should be in a low paid, part time job unless they want to be.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 37,526 ✭✭✭✭BorneTobyWilde


    You should move to Liechtenstein or Switzerland . You'd get massive salaries there with your PhD

    Easily 100k plus a year



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,502 ✭✭✭✭LambshankRedemption




  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 8,130 Mod ✭✭✭✭HildaOgdenx


    Mod reminder - PI is not a discussion forum.

    As per the charter:

    • Personal Issues is an advice forum.
    • Posters are required to offer advice or opinion to the OP in their replies.

    If you are unfamiliar with the forum charter, please take time to read it before posting.
    Thank you.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,218 ✭✭✭tabby aspreme


    https://www.workaway.info/

    Woofing was suggested earlier in the thread and here's something similar called Workaway, it's another great way to travel and meet people



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,038 ✭✭✭Ficheall


    Yes, I know what you said - and it's not true. While the OP does need a nudge, it's not helpful to pretend their phd will be a magic key to get them a job, because it may well not be, and suggesting otherwise might lead the OP to feeling they've failed when they don't get shortlisted for jobs in their field.

    Something will turn up, but expectations should be tempered for the sake of one's sanity.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,604 ✭✭✭Tork


    Did you have a career plan before you began the PhD? Or was it something you undertook because you could? Have you ever spoken to a careers coach or lecturers from your old college? They should be able to give you suggestions for where to go next with your qualifications. You don't have to view your next destination as the place where you finally settle. You're putting too much pressure on yourself with that.



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