Anonymous wrote:I was in a job with a bad, micromanaging manager. One day I couldn't deal with the shit anymore and I resigned. My husband was shocked as he didn't expect me to quit. My boss and I had several talks prior to that and I was also one of the top performing employees. But his constant nagging, pushing and micromanaging was affecting my health. I developed high BP and diabetes. I quit one day and gave a 2 week notice. In my last week, I felt like my head felt lighter and my brain was actually beginning to think straight. On the first day of my time home jobless, I went to the tennis court and hit the ball 500 times. Felt better. In about a month, i felt like a real human being after a long time. I started applying for jobs again and landed in a job 2 months since the first application. I think all I needed was a break from that toxic environment.
I would say OP, if you have some savings to figure out your life for next 12 months, go for a quit.
Anonymous wrote:watch the movie “lost in america.” it saved me from quitting many times.
it’s a comedy, but i’m not kidding.
Anonymous wrote:So many people are experiencing burn out. I’m having a hard time seeing how an experienced worker in an in-demand field doesn’t find a new job after taking some time off, as long as it isn’t years if time off.
Do something interesting with the time to help explain the gap. Some sort of part-time consulting work? A volunteer position? Traveling abroad on some defined plan like “I wanted to bicycle through Vietnam”? Write and publish an article?
We need to stop shaming the need to recharge. As long as you are completely inactive, I say stand confident in your decision to take a little time for you.
Anonymous wrote:Can you swing it financially to retire now? If so just do it. Life is short. When you get back your health and happiness, you can consult, or work a low-stress retail job