minakpori84 wrote:
I’m here simply to ask for some wisdom and advice from those more experienced.
I have been working as a software engineer at a transportation company in London for 9 months. I’ve subsequently interviewed and received an offer from a “better” company. However, I feel comfortable where I am, which causes me to want to reject the offer. The new company seems to be making the onboarding process especially tedious and painful, with a lot of intrusive questions being asked. This has been causing me a lot of distress, breaks downs etc…
I’m unsure if this discomfort and unwillingness to change (a very common feeling I have) are warranted or if this feeling is telling of something insidious about the company I’m being asked to join. Should I trust this feeling?
I know this is more on the theme of career advice, but I suspect what is going on here is linked to my autism and NTs may not be having a mental breakdown simply because of a job switch.
Thank you for reading so far and sorry for my spelling and grammar.
My son (who likely has some ASD) had a similar dilemma, whether to stay in the comfortable rut of the job he was used to or to go for one that was more high-powered with "better" future prospects. One difference between his choice and yours was that the new place he was looking at hadn't shown any direct evidence of being worse (you mention yours
"making the onboarding process especially tedious and painful, with a lot of intrusive questions" which makes me think the management isn't the world's finest). The new place in my son's case was just daunting because it looked likely to be more hectic, and it was bigger, which usually correlates with a more intransigent management, pointless bureaucracy etc.
Anyway he went for the new job. He's had times when he's seriously considered quitting, but he's held on and has come to no serious harm as far as I can see. Financially he's better off. The world of work has never caused him to break down, but clearly it causes him quite a bit of stress from time to time. Hope the information helps.
Do I ever fear change even when it's good for me? Not really. I more dislike some types of change than fear them. I've also noticed that changes are happening all the time to practically everybody, yet I think many of them don't upset Aspies, so I think it would be interesting if somebody studied what types of change do cause us undue distress and what types don't, because I think this idea that "Aspies don't like change" is way too simplistic, and it might be easier to figure out coping strategies if we knew more than that.