From my personnal experience, this describes perfectly why people coming from poorer backgrounds struggle to get good jobs. Quite often, you just can't wait for the right job - you need to pay the bills so you take the first one available, even if you know that it's not the best choice for you. But it's the only realistic one, because waiting 3-6 months for the good opportunity is simply off the table. Then the job you take, it takes you a lot of time and effort anyway so this right opportunity 3 months later is no longer realistic neither.
Such ultra-reductive advice, in any arena, personal, technical, professional, is as as low quality as mouth babble gets.
Decisions that involve many trade offs and hurdles, both obvious, and specific to individual's circumstances, are not helped by annoyingly illiterate advice.
I wouldn't mind an HN rule aimed at curbing this kind of comment, which unfortunately, comes up regularly.
At this point I feel like I should just ride things out and cross that bridge when it’s forced upon me, if it ever is. In the meantime, I’ve sought to keep my cost of living low and save as much as I can, in an effort to derisk.
Just too risky in this economy, and doesn't help every company is "AI for X" which isn't that appealing and asks for office time.
I'll stick with my fully remote job.
Even if we reduce this to the supposedly lucky ones to work in technology, in many countries that is associated as any other kind of office job, very very far away from SV culture.