Entire neighborhoods are built with an HOA already pre-installed by the developers, with no way out of them AFAIK beyond basically dismantling the company that manages the HOA (that you funded by buying into the neighborhood).
Housing is extremely predatory in the US, and that's not even getting into ever increasing home values being a major part of the stock market.
Nothing wrong with that; Social engineering is what i would consider an essential skill for customer support, and it can take people far in the field of IT.
The sheer market share that forces websites develop for chrome for maximum visibility, to force websites to allow their content to be scraped to be usable by the average user.
Id take the jarheads tbh. They can usually follow instructions and admit it if they don't know what they're doing. Civil Engineers were always a fun tech support call, too.
Sounds like good honest work but i don't think id have the patience for it long term
I personally think I would greatly enjoy college, gaining knowledge for the purpose of just gaining knowledge (after probably a couple years of remedial... everything.) In the unlikely event that i get to enjoy a retirement, that's likely what i would want to do with my time.
Unfortunately, it is financially untenable for me to even consider higher education.
It got me into the position where I'm being automated out of my own job and utterly miserable, and simultaneously being judged for not making up shit to do or pretensing to be busy where there's nothing to do. I was very gently pressured into the role and caved almost immediately, and i hate it and the way out was yoinked out from under me before i could even take it.
Thirding this; sounds a lot like ADHD (executive dysfunction). ADHD is commonly comorbid with depression and anxiety.
Very easy to be mad at yourself for not doing something, then mad at yourself when you do do something and it takes less time/energy than you psyched yourself up for, and just staying angry at yourself.
Nothing changed.