I work in an employment assistance program here in Houston.
We will not advise people to go into the adult space (although for many, it's a very lucrative option), and occasionally we find people who are trying to get out of it, either cold turkey or trying to ease their way out of it over time.
This question is for the providers: are you actively preparing yourself for life in a new profession? No judgment whatsoever on what you do (that's obvious, as I've been a part-time hobbyist myself), but sometimes I worry about whether there's much long term thinking going on here.
My take on the macro-picture is that it's not going to get much better in the next year or so. A lot of people are going to be downsizing their lifestyles in order to survive the consequences of the slower economy. In the long LONG run (10+ years), that downsizing is a good thing ... we need to do it. But it's going to be painful, and a lot of folks will have to take employment that they might have thought before was beneath them. Additionally, a lot of folks will have to postpone retirement, and that means older folks in the job market for lower paying jobs in ways they haven't been before.
Maybe Houston, and Texas as a whole, will fare better than the USA because our politics have encouraged rather than discouraged job creation. But Washington's policies that have destroyed a lot of jobs are impacting here too. Just ask the offshore engineers ....
Just wanted to start a discussion on this ... not to throw a wet blanket on the party environment here at ECCIE, but I want to encourage everyone, especially providers, to think about the long run here.
Throwing it open for discussion.