Yes
Nope
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I was a job quitter in my early 20's, granted they were shitty gains of employment. Sweaty horrible manual labor that slightly paid better after taxes than illegals hanging out at a Home Depot to jump into the back of a truck and work all day for like 35 bucks under the rule of a shady contractor. Anyway I worked my last job for almost 5 years and made close to 2 hundred grand.
Economies are fickle so yeah
Yes—for a short period early in my career.
In my mid‑20s, I moved roles every 12–18 months. I was exploring industries, figuring out what energized me, and chasing better learning opportunities. It taught me a lot, but it also meant I had to work harder to prove commitment to new employers.
Eventually, I slowed down, stayed longer, and focused on depth, not just variety. That balance—some exploration, then stability—helped my career more than either extreme.
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What's a job hopper?
I'm guessing it's someone that keeps quitting one job to get another and then quits that one to get another.
I've had at least 64 jobs in my life but, it was mostly because nearly all of them were temporary or seasonal.
The only way to make more money is by changing jobs or forcing your employer to match another employers offer. Loyalty in the workforce is never rewarded financially
No. I usually had one steady job and then maybe a part time job.
Nah, when I find a job I stick with it.
Yes, I had a long career in IT and that is really the nature of working in that field
Nope. The last place i worked at i worked there for 23 years.
Not. I always stayed too long.
nope
Nope.
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