General Marvel Legends

Honestly never occurred to me but I suppose might be worth looking into. I've spent so much of my life so far from even fantasizing about home ownership I barely know where to start.
Feel free to DM me if you want. I learned far too much about the process when I bought a few years ago. I can at least point you in the right direction.
Also, though I'm not getting any younger, I'm averse to setting down even semi-permanent roots in this state. I've lived here all my life, but I'd rather not die in Texas.
Yeaaaaaaah. I was determined to leave Florida by the time I was 27. After college, I couldn't get a job in-state, so I ripped the band-aid off and moved without a job years before I planned to. It was reckless, I got lucky, and it was the best decision I ever made. I was also privileged enough to have my grandma loan me a few months of rent money. Without that, I couldn't have done it. My now-wife got a job within three months of moving, and I got a job two months later.

My advice—with some major caveats—is the sooner the better. It gets harder as you get older.

The caveats are the current job market. It's an employer's market (thank you, President Trump).

I was also on the hiring committee for a library position recently. It was brutal. Of the five candidates, four of them would've been the best person I'd ever hired. They were compassionate, smart, qualified people. The library staff member on the committee repeatedly told us how difficult it is to get a library job, particularly in a blue city/state. She herself lived in Texas for 15 years to get experience that she couldn't have gotten here. The candidate we hired was a former part-timer at a public library. Despite a decade of experience there, a full-time position never opened up.

So, I think it depends on where you want to go. If you want to live in rural Montana or a small town in California, I don't think you'll have much trouble. If you're looking at a major metropolitan area in a desirable state, it'll be challenging. I'd encourage you to apply whenever you're ready to go, though. You only need one job to take a chance on you. Two of the great candidates we interviewed lived halfway across the country. Two of our college's librarians just accepted out-of-state positions. It's possible.

It should be a lot easier to get a job at an academic library, too.
 
Apart from dusting, I love having things on display because I'm a fiddler. I like to move things around from time-to-time, swap out accessories, and just plain change things up. Only problem is I never do it as much as I want to or think I will, but I try.
I need to do this more often. Cataloging my collection recently I tried to include pictures of accessories for each figure and I had forgotten about so many of them because they are in baggies in plastic drawers in the closet. Some of them can really change up the figure's look.
I even kind of welcome the challenge of fitting new figures into a display that's already pretty jam-packed. I somehow always seem to find a way, but I know with certain ones I'm not going to be able to do so anymore (toon TMNT, those damn sixth scale Mondo X-Men..) and that's when the real challenge begins.
Same. I complain about not having space but it's a fun challenge. My motto is there is always room somewhere. As bad as that may be. I started cataloging figures back in April and just finished everything that was on display as of yesterday. There is still some stuff in totes that I haven't added to it, probably 500 or so figures that I just need to sell because they are now obsolete. But not counting those I have 5,165 figures on display. I have a lot of different displays all around but none of the individual displays are very crowded I don't think.
 
I was also on the hiring committee for a library position recently. It was brutal. Of the five candidates, four of them would've been the best person I'd ever hired. They were compassionate, smart, qualified people. The library staff member on the committee repeatedly told us how difficult it is to get a library job, particularly in a blue city/state. She herself lived in Texas for 15 years to get experience that she couldn't have gotten here. The candidate we hired was a former part-timer at a public library. Despite a decade of experience there, a full-time position never opened up.

So, I think it depends on where you want to go. If you want to live in rural Montana or a small town in California, I don't think you'll have much trouble. If you're looking at a major metropolitan area in a desirable state, it'll be challenging. I'd encourage you to apply whenever you're ready to go, though. You only need one job to take a chance on you. Two of the great candidates we interviewed lived halfway across the country. Two of our college's librarians just accepted out-of-state positions. It's possible.

It should be a lot easier to get a job at an academic library, too.
Yeah, my library experience is odd. I'm now Assoc. Director Level, but I don't have any sort of library degree. All my experience is my freelance background (art direction, project management), my makerspace management stuff, and related things. So if they've got a makerspace, I'm going to be one of the more qualified candidates just because there aren't many folks with my specialty. For most other library jobs I wouldn't even be in the interview pool. The makerspace makes me hypothetically qualified to try for a lot of jobs, it's just finding the right mix of "pays ok, has insurance, maybe doesn't work me to death".
 
Apart from dusting, I love having things on display because I'm a fiddler. I like to move things around from time-to-time, swap out accessories, and just plain change things up. Only problem is I never do it as much as I want to or think I will, but I try. I even kind of welcome the challenge of fitting new figures into a display that's already pretty jam-packed. I somehow always seem to find a way, but I know with certain ones I'm not going to be able to do so anymore (toon TMNT, those damn sixth scale Mondo X-Men..) and that's when the real challenge begins.
I like to fiddle too, and that's why I often have like 5-10 figures on my desk at any given moment. Usually it's a mix of whatever just got delivered plus some oldies I rotate in. But yeah, I've been wanting to get into the cool display game for a while now. And I think this year is my year for it. I used to have the classic detofs, but I got rid of those in my last move about a year and a half ago because I just didn't expect them to travel well. Now I'm going to go more towards outfitting some Billy shelves with like oversized booknook style displays. That way stuff is still sealed, but whenever I move again I don't have to worry about the display platform getting destroyed in the move.
 
I live in one of the most non Texasy part of Texas and even still I too think about escaping the Confederacy before my life is done. Problems being my friends and family responsibilities here and of course those dim wits are trying to make the whole globe the Confederacy
Not to totally derail this thread into a completely different area, but I'm at the point now where I basically just have my mom and dad left in the state, and I've recently had to cut mom off for reasons related to her overall decline (a whole different story). So I'm halfway out of this place already. I have friends here, but realistically I almost never see my friends in person anymore anyway. Even friends who live just an hour away I see maybe three times a year. The vast majority of my life right now is going to work, coming home and trying to recharge for the next day, and playing ttrpgs online every other weekend. If that's what it's going to be, I can do it anywhere.
 
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Obviously you scout cities with the best toy hunt yield.
My boyfriend and I are looking to move in together over the next year or so, and that's been my biggest thought. 😅 We don't even have that many big box stores here, so a place with more would be lovely, but I'd miss our smaller independent comic/secondhand shops and such. We both keep saying, only half-jokingly, that we have no idea where we're gonna be able to put half our stuff. Luckily we collect different things- he's mostly vinyl and music memorabilia, I'm mostly collectibles, and we both collect movies. I will, unfortunately, probably definitely need more room than him.
 
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