The best advice for young INTPs is 1-2mg selegiline sublingually, as it increases motivation: https://intpforum.com/showthread.php?t=26632. Adding 5-10mg memantine should slow/prevent any tolerance.
Also, the sooner they realize freelancing/entrepreneurship is likely the only way to maintain sanity/happiness while still earning money, the sooner they can start preparing. The sooner they start gaining perspective, the less likely they'll fail.
School was a waste of time, happiness doesn't come from being around others (until the internet, so maybe that's not such an issue these days), don't get involved with ISFJs (they are a trap that can drag on for years and gnaw away at who you are) or other guardians, live alone, nootropics (N-acetyl semax amidate, P21, etc), brainwave entrainment, steam/vapor cleaner with good PSI, etc.
Silicon (from monomethylsilanetriol or maybe bamboo extract) prevents/reduces wrinkles, weak bones and teeth, poor collagen formation, etc. 30-50mg absorbed from diet + supplements is preferred. Monomethylsilanetriol = 64% absorption and bamboo extract = probably 5%.
Having your own business and the stress that comes with it seems way more valuable to me than adopting someone else's stress as an employee. As an employee, I could give two shits about my company's problems, yet I still have to help solve those problems and deal with the related stress.
Working for somebody else to profit 10-15X what you earn in salary blows. You are required to care just as much as the upper management (if not more), just to keep getting that weekly check. Yeah, you have less on the line, the most you can lose is your job. But as an employee your business is your job. If you lose it, you gotta start a new business either in the same industry, or a brand new one.
Hence preparation. That is, the sooner it's clear where they'll likely want to be, the more time/buffer they have to ensure they won't fail. It could work out that they can't think of a viable idea, but at least they didn't blindly run into a 9-5.I'm sorry but I'm going have to disagree with you on that one real fast. Opening a business is a very risky move. It is not a guarantee for success and it can be an enormous money sink in the first few years. In fact, the main reason why most small businesses fail is because of a lack of capital.
https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/Business-Survival.pdf
According to the above, about 50% of businesses fail by the fifth year, and a minority last past 10 years or so. This might be optimistic or pessimistic depending on your view point, but from many people I know who started businesses, it can take at least a few years to start generating positive cash flow depending on the industry. There can be a lot of lost opportunity gains in that time period, time spent doing other things. (Also where would you get the money for your business?)
Also I don't know where people get the perception that having your own business would be in any way less stressful than a regular job. Owning your own business is fucking tough. Every decision weighs on you, you constantly think about the business, etc. etc. It's also a fallacy to state that the owner of the business has no boss: the customers and your competitors are your boss. Most of the time it necessitates much more social interaction with people than at a job, whereas at a job you can just put in your 8 to 5 and fuck off. Social skills are extremely important for opening your own business more so than other jobs. If you are a social butterfly, I say go for it. But this is the INTP forum...
If anything, school is where INTPs are most likely to excel. You have an analytical and concept driven brain, for fuck's sake, use it. Physics, computer science, engineering, mathematics, these are all very abstract and conceptual fields that are extremely high in demand. They aren't glorious, but they need less social skills than other fields for one to do well (except for engineering) and you don't have to kill yourself worrying about your business 24/7. Nor do you have to beg and grovel for sponsorship, funding, or acquiring a customer base.
I don't know about freelancing, I'll do some research on it. But if you are doing freelancing it will be very difficult to break into an industry of your choice if you do it for too long. It's much easier for a someone with a career to switch to free lancing than for a free lancer to break into a career. And trust me, connections from your career would make it much easier for you to freelance...
Of course, free lancers here are free to disagree, as I admit I only have a few anecdotes to support this.
I'm sorry but I'm going have to disagree with you on that one real fast. Opening a business is a very risky move. It is not a guarantee for success and it can be an enormous money sink in the first few years. In fact, the main reason why most small businesses fail is because of a lack of capital.
https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/Business-Survival.pdf
According to the above, about 50% of businesses fail by the fifth year, and a minority last past 10 years or so. This might be optimistic or pessimistic depending on your view point, but from many people I know who started businesses, it can take at least a few years to start generating positive cash flow depending on the industry. There can be a lot of lost opportunity gains in that time period, time spent doing other things. (Also where would you get the money for your business?)
Also I don't know where people get the perception that having your own business would be in any way less stressful than a regular job. Owning your own business is fucking tough. Every decision weighs on you, you constantly think about the business, etc. etc. It's also a fallacy to state that the owner of the business has no boss: the customers and your competitors are your boss. Most of the time it necessitates much more social interaction with people than at a job, whereas at a job you can just put in your 8 to 5 and fuck off. Social skills are extremely important for opening your own business more so than other jobs. If you are a social butterfly, I say go for it. But this is the INTP forum...
If anything, school is where INTPs are most likely to excel. You have an analytical and concept driven brain, for fuck's sake, use it. Physics, computer science, engineering, mathematics, these are all very abstract and conceptual fields that are extremely high in demand. They aren't glorious, but they need less social skills than other fields for one to do well (except for engineering) and you don't have to kill yourself worrying about your business 24/7. Nor do you have to beg and grovel for sponsorship, funding, or acquiring a customer base.
I don't know about freelancing, I'll do some research on it. But if you are doing freelancing it will be very difficult to break into an industry of your choice if you do it for too long. It's much easier for a someone with a career to switch to free lancing than for a free lancer to break into a career. And trust me, connections from your career would make it much easier for you to freelance...
Of course, free lancers here are free to disagree, as I admit I only have a few anecdotes to support this.