I've been having some problems with stress/anxiety lately, and I'm starting to think that's giving way to depression.
While I originally thought it was just the workload (unrealistic timelines when I had just transitioned to a new team - QA - where I was the only tester for a large chunk of changes) or the job (large consulting firm, expecting us to enter time into a tracker where we're accountable down to a quarter hour - with no place to enter coffee/smoke/washroom breaks), I'm now wondering if I even want to be in development at all.
I'm probably not like most developers on this site; I'm in no way elite. I got into programming in 2000, when I was in grade 10. It was my first exposure to the subject and I liked the feel of the work - the control, the delight in something you made coming to life on the screen.
I took a few more classes and liked it, but only did basic learning outside the classroom - the internet wasn't as big back then, and I didn't have the access to it I do now. When college came along, I decided to try programming. It was college, not university (a distinction that means more up here in Canada - think more vocational learning like high level language stuff and syntax rather than the theoretical stuff you get with a CS degree in University) so I don't feel prepared.
My first resume out of college said I've worked with a bunch of stuff - .Net, Java, C++ - but it was all high up stuff I doubted I could get a job in without more experience / out-of-class learning.
I was in a financial crunch so I took a job far from home doing maintenance on a legacy system running a bit of COBOL and a lot of report generation/data dump tools (Cognos Powerhouse and Robelle Suprtool for those who might know). After a recent migration (a project I was on, and enjoyed, for a year and a half of my two years service), we're running under HP-UX with a proprietary shell to emulate the MPE system we used to have.
I know the job is career suicide considering where I want to be (C# or maybe Java - something "newer", working with a team that could actually mentor me rather than just throw me to the wolves) but I don't know how to balance work and life enough to get far enough in my learning to make a difference before it's too late.
I'm freaking out at work. I've been on two stress leaves since early September (once for a week after I basically tried to quit, and another for two weeks after a few days back when I snapped again and had a panic attack), and I have an appointment with my doctor on Wednesday to go over things again. I want more stress leave since I can't handle being at work, but I think it's more "that job" than the career in general.
Since I'm already terribly behind, I've questioned leaving development for some other career. I'm not sure what I want to do though, and money is a big concern too (which is why I haven't quit my job yet as well).
So my question - Can I salvage my career? Should I just give up? What can I do to get myself to a "junior developer" level quickly?
Thanks!
Update:
I've noticed the view count on this page has been rising a lot in the past few days, so I came back to read over the new comments left on this question. @kajaco asked for a follow up about an hour go, and I'm happy to oblige.
Since this question was first posted, I've returned to my job. I did this initially to get a bit extra money and hold me over while I looked into my options with EI. My team lead has been surprisingly supportive of my return, although our HR manager was so cold about the situation when we spoke the morning I arrived back to the office ("Are you here to play, or are you here to work?").
I've been handed a lot more analysis work this time around, as well as being tasked to mentor a junior resource. The pure analysi
