Anonymous wrote:I took what I was doing and moved to doing it as a consultant working on my own.
I’m not sure if you are female, but you do mention you are a minority. It wasn’t until I left a corporate job that I understood how much discrimination permeates the culture even in so-called “good” offices. This made me hate working and so, so burnt out. It was just exhausting having to be 150% to get anywhere.
I’m not completely free of that working for myself, but I’m at least a step removed. I feel like I got some of my power back by being able to choose who I will and will not work for, how much work I can reasonably take on and what skills are truly my best and worth focusing my time on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I also grew up poor and hate working and question why we force such misery upon ourselves. I also left six-figure jobs because life is too short to feel such dread all the time.
My current solution is consulting. I work for myself and average 20-30 hours per week. All my earnings go straight into my bank account. I still don’t love what I do, but I have much more control over my time and can pay the bills.
Why we force misery upon ourselves is because we need the labor that we do to live---we need people to farm and make food, drive food to stores, sell food to us so we can eat. We need people to make the materials to build houses, ship those materials to the right places, and build those houses. Not all jobs are "necessary" perse, but if we weren't working, how would the population be supported?
Universal basic income. While the jobs that you listed are necessary, so many others are complete BS and could be automated or done in less than 40 hours a week.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:r/antiwork
Off topic but did you see that interview on Fox news of the antiwork mod? Holy cow what a disaster.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I also grew up poor and hate working and question why we force such misery upon ourselves. I also left six-figure jobs because life is too short to feel such dread all the time.
My current solution is consulting. I work for myself and average 20-30 hours per week. All my earnings go straight into my bank account. I still don’t love what I do, but I have much more control over my time and can pay the bills.
Why we force misery upon ourselves is because we need the labor that we do to live---we need people to farm and make food, drive food to stores, sell food to us so we can eat. We need people to make the materials to build houses, ship those materials to the right places, and build those houses. Not all jobs are "necessary" perse, but if we weren't working, how would the population be supported?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I also grew up poor and hate working and question why we force such misery upon ourselves. I also left six-figure jobs because life is too short to feel such dread all the time.
My current solution is consulting. I work for myself and average 20-30 hours per week. All my earnings go straight into my bank account. I still don’t love what I do, but I have much more control over my time and can pay the bills.
Why we force misery upon ourselves is because we need the labor that we do to live---we need people to farm and make food, drive food to stores, sell food to us so we can eat. We need people to make the materials to build houses, ship those materials to the right places, and build those houses. Not all jobs are "necessary" perse, but if we weren't working, how would the population be supported?
Anonymous wrote:r/antiwork
Anonymous wrote:You did invest the money you earned, right? I have made only about $30k a year in last 20 years, but I invested some of it in stocks. I hated my work and my drunk boss, and had to do something that allowed me to say bye to him one day.
I might have enough so I can work part time doing something I love.