Ecdysis
Diamond Member
So, I have a job that's probably going to be made 100% redundant within the next 5 - 10 years.
I specifically got 3 years of education/ training in this job at the end of my 20s because it was disability-compatible... Work that I could do from home, self-employed, part-time, on a contract by contract basis...
It's work that's definitely going to be replaced by AI. My colleagues in this field know this too, but I think many of them are underestimating the speed with which it will happen. Most of them have had only superficial interactions with AI. I would normally be in the same position, but by interacting with the AI on this site (Dr Catalyst) I've gotten some pretty detailed insight into what AI currently can and can't do and how fast it's progressing. That's making me realise how huge the impact on my industry is going to be.
I started re-training in a social/ care based job a few years ago... started it during the pandemic. I figure this is a sector of the economy that is only going to massively expand in future and workers will be massively sought out here, while other industries fall fully to AI. It's not work that's really disability-compatible for me, tho, so it's a lot more stressful than my previous work. It's something where, if I do work in this sector long-term, I'm going to have to work out niches/ areas that are compatible to my skills and to my disability.
I don't know... I've got sooo many major life stressors and changes going on and this is just "one additional stressor" on top of all the others... I don't really have the bandwidth to deal with it... but it keeps rumbling around in the back of my brain... That this change is going to happen to my industry and that it's going to come to a head sonner (?) or later (?)
There's adjacent jobs in my old industry that I could do training for... if I don't want to / feel like I can't fully switch to the social/ care industry.
Most of my colleagues are still in the denial stage about how completely AI is going to affect our industry. As I said, I can understand it because until now, their exposure to AI is very superficial/ basically at a gimmicky level... They think it's something that students use to get help writing essays and they assume those essays are pretty basic/ standardised/ unsophisticated. Their denial, however, is also causing me some cognitive dissonance... I know AI will definitely fully replace our industry... but with colleagues still being complacent, it feels like I'm being PTSD-hypervigilant and "exaggerating the threat"... even tho that's not the case here.
Anyone else starting to see changes in their industry looming due to AI and starting to think about re-training in other areas...?
I specifically got 3 years of education/ training in this job at the end of my 20s because it was disability-compatible... Work that I could do from home, self-employed, part-time, on a contract by contract basis...
It's work that's definitely going to be replaced by AI. My colleagues in this field know this too, but I think many of them are underestimating the speed with which it will happen. Most of them have had only superficial interactions with AI. I would normally be in the same position, but by interacting with the AI on this site (Dr Catalyst) I've gotten some pretty detailed insight into what AI currently can and can't do and how fast it's progressing. That's making me realise how huge the impact on my industry is going to be.
I started re-training in a social/ care based job a few years ago... started it during the pandemic. I figure this is a sector of the economy that is only going to massively expand in future and workers will be massively sought out here, while other industries fall fully to AI. It's not work that's really disability-compatible for me, tho, so it's a lot more stressful than my previous work. It's something where, if I do work in this sector long-term, I'm going to have to work out niches/ areas that are compatible to my skills and to my disability.
I don't know... I've got sooo many major life stressors and changes going on and this is just "one additional stressor" on top of all the others... I don't really have the bandwidth to deal with it... but it keeps rumbling around in the back of my brain... That this change is going to happen to my industry and that it's going to come to a head sonner (?) or later (?)
There's adjacent jobs in my old industry that I could do training for... if I don't want to / feel like I can't fully switch to the social/ care industry.
Most of my colleagues are still in the denial stage about how completely AI is going to affect our industry. As I said, I can understand it because until now, their exposure to AI is very superficial/ basically at a gimmicky level... They think it's something that students use to get help writing essays and they assume those essays are pretty basic/ standardised/ unsophisticated. Their denial, however, is also causing me some cognitive dissonance... I know AI will definitely fully replace our industry... but with colleagues still being complacent, it feels like I'm being PTSD-hypervigilant and "exaggerating the threat"... even tho that's not the case here.
Anyone else starting to see changes in their industry looming due to AI and starting to think about re-training in other areas...?
Last edited: