Table of Contents
What are the least known professions?
The best lesser-known jobs include:
- Management Analyst.
- Business Operations Manager.
- Radiologic Technologist.
- Clinical Laboratory Technician.
- Computer Systems Administrator.
- Ophthalmic Medical Technician.
- Logistician.
- Environmental Science and Protection Technician.
What is the most meaningful profession?
The Most Meaningful Jobs
- Clergy. 98\% Find Job Meaningful.
- (tie) English Language and Literature Teachers, Postsecondary.
- (tie) Directors, Religious Activities and Education.
- (tie) Surgeons.
- Education Administrators, Elementary and Secondary School.
- Radiation Therapists.
- (tie) Chiropractors.
- (tie) Psychiatrists.
What are the weirdest highest paying jobs?
Unusual jobs that pay well
- Bereavement coordinator. National average salary: $47,076 per year.
- Color expert. National average salary: $17.71 – $23.34 per hour.
- Online dating ghostwriter. National average salary: $23.84 per hour.
- Bingo manager.
- Hippotherapist.
- Veterinary acupuncturist.
- Flavorist.
- Clinical ethicist.
What jobs are fun and high paying?
Fun Jobs That Pay Well
- Voice actor. Pay: Up to $500 an hour.
- Professional video gamer. Pay: At least $100,000 a year.
- Food critic. Salary: $76,612.
- Supercar driving instructor. Salary: Up to $120,000.
- Chocolatier. Salary: $29,040.
- Interior designer. Salary: $49,810.
- Mystery shopper. Salary: Up to $75,000.
- Marine biologist.
Should we disclose our dark side?
Given that our dark side embodies our more primitive, pleasure- or power-seeking instincts, must we zealously avoid disclosing it, or reject it as despicable—something other than respectably human and therefore to be shunned and repudiated?
What does it mean to fully accept your dark side?
Fully accepting our basic humanity actually necessitates that we acknowledge, and make peace with, our so-called “dark side”—which, finally, is far less dark when we see it for what it is. As Carl Jung said, “Everyone carries a shadow, and the less it is embodied in the individual’s conscious life, the blacker and denser it is.”
Is our dark side innocent?
At a safe remove from reality, we can offer ourselves the alternative of imagining what, in actuality, we wouldn’t really choose to do . . . or, for that matter, be. And in that sense, our dark side can be seen as, well, rather “innocent.”
Are “dark” predilections inherently culpable?
In the end, such “dark” predilections really can’t be seen as intrinsically culpable, in that most of them merely represent “appetites” or “urges” innate in all of us. So might we, finally, honor them, appreciating our most aggressive or erotic fantasies, daydreams (and many night dreams, too) as a psychological safety valve?