Anonymous wrote:“Quiet quitting” is a dumb term that suggests abnegation. I look at the more like recalibrating the work-life balance. Putting more appropriate and balanced amounts of energy into work so that you have something left for the rest of your day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The voluntarily mommy tracked among us are laughing. Welcome to the club.
I actually think mommy track is the opposite, over qualified women take jobs below them for flexibility and low stress because they can do the job with their eyes closed and one hand tied.
They are actually over competent.
Anonymous wrote:The voluntarily mommy tracked among us are laughing. Welcome to the club.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Today Show did a story covering the online conversations about not going “above and beyond” at work post-pandemic. They’re calling it Quiet Quitting, but it’s not quitting at all…it’s doing your job and just your job. Not doing the jobs of others on top of yours. Having better work/life boundaries.
I feel like we’ve been having these conversations here for a while now. It’s interesting that they are assigning it to younger employees, but I’m solidly Gen X and decided to coast by *just* doing my job after the first six months of working from home when I realized how much time I was spending money n doing more, more, more.
Anyone else see the segment?
Coast? Coast?
How on the world did you not say slack! We are the slacker generation!
Anonymous wrote:The Today Show did a story covering the online conversations about not going “above and beyond” at work post-pandemic. They’re calling it Quiet Quitting, but it’s not quitting at all…it’s doing your job and just your job. Not doing the jobs of others on top of yours. Having better work/life boundaries.
I feel like we’ve been having these conversations here for a while now. It’s interesting that they are assigning it to younger employees, but I’m solidly Gen X and decided to coast by *just* doing my job after the first six months of working from home when I realized how much time I was spending money n doing more, more, more.
Anyone else see the segment?
Anonymous wrote:The Today Show did a story covering the online conversations about not going “above and beyond” at work post-pandemic. They’re calling it Quiet Quitting, but it’s not quitting at all…it’s doing your job and just your job. Not doing the jobs of others on top of yours. Having better work/life boundaries.
I feel like we’ve been having these conversations here for a while now. It’s interesting that they are assigning it to younger employees, but I’m solidly Gen X and decided to coast by *just* doing my job after the first six months of working from home when I realized how much time I was spending money n doing more, more, more.
Anyone else see the segment?