| It varies, for me, but on average I'd say I do maybe 2 hours of real, actual work on any given day. A lot of time is spent thinking about various projects or issues and coming up with solutions and strategies, but real concrete work...not that much. |
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A lot. I spend an hour and a half doing yoga & showering/changing. I eat while working. Everyone I talk to is generally having a conversation about work-related stuff.
Probably 6-7 hours a day is actual work. |
| Painfully little. I get stupider every day. I'd love to find something more engaging. |
| My job involves talking to people all day long, followed by maybe 90 minutes of paperwork. In a typical 8-9 hour day I'm working at least 6-7 hours. |
| I'm a developer, so I would say in my case "actual" work is writing code. That's probably about 5-6 hours depending on the day, with the rest of the time in meetings, on calls, etc. It's gotten as low as 2, but thankfully that's a rare occurrence. |
| 4-5 hours of productive work and another 3-4 of phone tag BS. |
| My whole entire shift from 0800-1630. I don't get the luxury of any down time. |
This. Since work is...well...work. And people die if I don't do my job. |
| I hit the ground running at work. My time at work is typically 7-13 hours, I don't take breaks, and I literally never sit. If I eat it's a bite while walking from point a to point b. |
| All of it except lunch break. |
| I am a designer, so process is a big part of my work. I am surprised to hear so many people say that active thinking about solutions to problems is not real work. I must live in a different world! |
I'm about the same, but that thinking time is work in my field. I can't just sit down and WRITE A GRANT or WRITE A PAPER-I need time to strategize and think and go down paths that are dead ends. I've learned to balance my work, so I do some more concrete tasks each day just so I don't feel lazy and unproductive. Usually a period of time when I don't feel like I'm working is followed by a period of intense productivity. |
| "Thinking" time is definitely "real work!" Non-work time, to me, is small talk with coworkers, phoning to make a doctor's appointment, checking personal email, etc. |
This. I never even considered "thinking" as non-work. It's a big part of my job. But it is active thinking in that I'm making notes, looking up info, etc. |
| I just stare at my desk, but it looks like I'm working. I do that for probably another hour after lunch too, I'd say in a given week I probably only do about fifteen minutes of real, actual, work. |