Which questions are worth answering? I know there's a post about "bad" questions, but should I try to answer them anyway?
No, you shouldn't try to answer bad questions. You should either work to improve those questions so that they become good questions, or move on. Bad questions are bad because they attract bad answers (or are fundamentally unanswerable).
It's really shitty-feeling when you provide an answer, only to have the OP never return to appreciate you (and give you rep! Which leads into...)
This you just need to learn to not focus on. You should be worried about the worldwide community at large, not just one person. If the community as a whole feels that the answer is worthwhile, then the recognition of just one of the world's 7 billion+ inhabitants shouldn't be overly concerning. If the general community consensus is that your answer is poor, then you should be very worried, even if the one person that asked the question liked it.
The Rep System, to me feels over-constrained. I'm sure that's because I haven't had to witness all the atrocities committed over the years, but still. I have a comment or question about a Question, my only choices are to write an Answer or wait to find out
It takes between one and two decent posts to be able to comment. That's not really that hard. Finding one or two questions that are already good questions for you to answer, before moving on to trying to help an author turn a bad question into a good question, is really a step you should take. Once you've started to get a hand for how to answer a question that is already good, (which should probably take you longer than it will take to get 50 rep) then consider spending time holding the hand of question authors while they work to improve an unanswerable question.
If I wait to find out, then someone with the proper rep can come in and ask, then post the answer and then my existence is superfluous.
If someone else asks a clarifying question, or otherwise helps the OP improve their question, you can still use the information the OP responds with to answer.
That said, if you're finding that you are superfluous, then you should be finding ways to make yourself not superfluous. If you're only ever doing things that lots of other people can and will do, then you're not adding value. Find questions that are good, and that others can't (or at least haven't) answered and answer them. Learn what you need to learn to make yourself valuable, rather than opining the fact that you're not.
With all the users online, how do I contribute the one gleaming pearl of my knowledge in a vast treasury of veteran (workplace and to this site) gems?
Spend some time thinking about what types of problems you can solve better than other people, and search for questions about that topic, or find a topic that other people struggle to deal with, and learn what you need to learn to be able to answer them.