>>60853309
>sweet summer child.
gay
>there will be nothing pressuring you to get it done.
There's nothing pressuring me from cleaning my apartment, yet when I take a week off work that becomes something I immediately take care of. Yet when I grind away at work for months nothing gets cleaned.
So, nah I would. Without work I wouldn't have to worry about enjoying my time off because it's only a few days, so I'd always be the most productive to set things in order and get shit done.
>just hope they don't resent you or start trying to use you for your money
They'd welcome my company and my help around the house, and most are retired already anyway. Either way, I won't spend all my time with them, I have too many things I want to do.
>You'll spend years at a time not getting anything done on your "projects"
Wrong. I do indie gamedev as a hobby, I have the skills to work on them, I've released games, but it's hard to spend all day at work doing software dev, then an additional 4 hours after work and weekends on my own projects in front of a computer for more than a few months without burning out.
Without a job to pay the bills, I would be free to do gamedev full time, and it wouldn't feel like I'm pressed for time constantly.
>Does this sound like fulfillment?
Sounds like my life now, just work, go home, try to enjoy what little free time I have, sleep, then work again. Try to maintain good relationships with coworkers and keep things going. Until the weeekend, then I work on gamedev on friday night and saturday, then I feel like I have no time left to enjoy myself before I have to work and spend sunday doomscrolling and watching movies or tv shows, and then monday hits and it repeats again. Except some days I'll visit family for birthdays or holidays, or play vidya with friends.
Not having to go to a job fixes this immediately since it changes my situation, going from being constantly constrained for time, to having an abundance of time.