Do you dream of turning your hobby into a profession so that you can earn a living while doing work you enjoy? At first glance, this seems desirable. You work 40 hours a week (sometimes even a little more). Work takes up a large part of your life. It's nice to fill this time with an activity that gives you pleasure, like your favorite hobby. For example, if you enjoy building and maintaining your media server on your home network, you might want to translate that into a career as a sysadmin.
Unfortunately, work is not always fun. While you may quickly forget one or two bad days, more prolonged, fun-free phases can be pretty exhausting, lower your mood, and spoil the joy of practicing your hobby because it's also your job.
If you turn your hobby into a profession, the line between work and personal time quickly gets blurred. There is the danger of taking work with you into your relaxing time or not being able to switch off and really clear your mind because you can't direct your thoughts to anything else. Instead, you continue to be on the job at home (possibly unconsciously) trying to find a solution to a workplace problem. This is a problem for many reasons, including that you don't get paid extra for this work at home, and you might become sick or experience burnout if you can't switch off and get some rest.
What do you do when it's too late and you've practiced your hobby as a profession for years? I can think of three possible solutions:
- Change your employer
- Change your profession
- Change your hobby
You can consider the first point, depending on the job market. But you shouldn't be too quick to throw in the towel because the grass usually looks greener on the other side of the fence. Once you have crossed it and realize that weeds also grow there, it's too late.
Whether you decide to pursue the second or third points may depend on how important your job and your hobby are to you.
[ Want a new IT career? Start learning with trial access to Red Hat's curriculum. ]
In my opinion, you would be well advised to find a new hobby. This way, you can draw strength to better master professional challenges and have something enjoyable that takes you away from work. If things are going well at work and you're enjoying your job again, then you can deal with similar topics in your spare time without falling back into old habits.
My fallback hobby is reading. I can immerse myself in another world and relax with a good book.
How do you cope? Have you had similar experiences? If so, how do you deal with it? How do you separate your professional and personal life when your hobby and profession merge? Share your opinion in the poll at the top of the page.
About the author
Jörg has been a Sysadmin for over ten years now. His fields of operation include Virtualization (VMware), Linux System Administration and Automation (RHEL), Firewalling (Forcepoint), and Loadbalancing (F5). He is a member of the Red Hat Accelerators Community and author of his personal blog at https://www.my-it-brain.de.
More like this
Bridging the gap: Red Hat Academy shaping open source talent in APAC
Ping command basics for testing and troubleshooting
Are Big Mistakes That Big Of A Deal? | Compiler
APIs And The Modernization Dilemma | Compiler: Legacies
Browse by channel
Automation
The latest on IT automation for tech, teams, and environments
Artificial intelligence
Updates on the platforms that free customers to run AI workloads anywhere
Open hybrid cloud
Explore how we build a more flexible future with hybrid cloud
Security
The latest on how we reduce risks across environments and technologies
Edge computing
Updates on the platforms that simplify operations at the edge
Infrastructure
The latest on the world’s leading enterprise Linux platform
Applications
Inside our solutions to the toughest application challenges
Virtualization
The future of enterprise virtualization for your workloads on-premise or across clouds