+1. Exactly! Although I am now a professional, I grew up in a blue collar household. Because of that, I make it a point to engage with them and converse with them. All of them have backstories. Closing a big deal is pressure. No doubt! But trying to make next month's rent is also pressure - pressure that I would not want to face. I do not think that everyone the OP is seeing is cheery and happy underneath. Many of them are in jobs where they may get in trouble if they are not pleasant and polite to the professionals. |
And some of us are severely over-estimating their impact on the world. Balance, people. Balance. |
Oh no. You didn't just equate blue collar workers with dogs, did you?
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Not PP, but I have to disagree with regard to friends. My less educated friends are insecure and judgmental. I wish they were happy people. |
| Op here. Yeah, I wonder if part of it is that it is their job to be pleasant. But they seem to smile and laugh with each other, too. I swear sometimes the only happy looking guy I are all day is the security guard checking IDs. |
Of course it is part of their job to pleasant to those around them! Do you also thing waitstaff are also happier/have less stress because they approach your table with a smile?! |
Exactly. Because all the lobbyists and PAC fundraisers and political axe men in DC are really impacting society "positively."
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| I grew up as the daughter of a handyman and a school kitchen worker (now working white collar) and trust me, the lives of blue collar/non-professional workers are every bit as complicated as the lives of white collar workers. |
Was thinking the same thing. Hate when people match impacting society and "professional" worker together as if they always go with one another. Fact is very few jobs have major impacts on society. Most merely exist to generate revenues or provide nice to have services. Also, education and salary don't equal worth to society. |
You must work in a really depressing place. You never smile with your co-workers? |