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by citizen_friend 675 days ago
this sounds a lot like the psychology of having nothing to lose vs something to lose. You play more aggressively and are more successful in the former case.
2 comments

Arguably GP is already successful in their current position with respect to overall satisfaction, if one treats satisfaction as a boolean.
Define successful. I think you two had an opposite meaning of what successful is.
Having a job he likes that pays him money he wants. That’s the criteria outlined. He’s just afraid it might end up being a job he doesn’t like.

There is a myth that higher paying jobs must be more miserable, but it’s rarely true.

Read more carefully:

> I'm now ignoring recruiters who are begging me to interview for insanely well-paying openings. I have a decently well-paying job with good work-life balance, and colleagues who respect me.

So their utility function has terms other than $. So define "successful", or define the utility function more objectively. It is very clear that yours vs theirs are quite different.

You’re trying to say that I’m defining success as money and he’s defining it as more wholesome factors.

That’s not what’s happening.