Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I go in every day anyway, but I'm very concerned a few of my best employees will leave if they try to enforce 4-5 days in the office.
I can go in but my mentee, She'll definitely quit. She does the work of 2.5 people, writes brilliantly. The only reason we have her is the work/life balance so she was able to balance the job and having young twins.
Anonymous wrote:I go in every day anyway, but I'm very concerned a few of my best employees will leave if they try to enforce 4-5 days in the office.
Anonymous wrote:I thought federal civil servants had good health insurance? Its "expensive"?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I will be willing to RTO but I will not work a minute early or a minute later than scheduled if I do. And, no laptops will be taken home at night or for snow days.
If they want to go back to 1990, then we go back to 1990.
This. I will check my boxes and nothing more. Need me to stay late? No, sorry, I have an appointment. Log on at home for call with out west coast colleagues. Sorry, I have an appointment.
I do all that now as I View that as a trade off for my flexibility. But that will end immediately upon RTO.
Get 'em tiger. Way to be a team player. You are soooo cool.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is a common set-up: two parents out of the house 10 hours a day, scrambling to provide care for their own children. We make it work because we have to.
And what benefit is there to society in making more people have to deal with this?
So your question (why should I have to suffer like you, essentially) comes across as a bit… privileged to those of us who do essential in-person jobs.
Nice try. Answer the question. What benefit is there to society in making other people’s lives worse?
You mean: What if we are all as self-serving as you?
Who is going to teach your children? Who is going to provide after-school activities and childcare for you? Who is going to be at the urgent care when you or your child get sick?
See, it’s really tiresome for those of us who work for the betterment of society (which often has to be done in person) to hear the woe-is-me from somebody who may have to experience a bit of what we do. It’s hard to feel sympathy when your argument is “well, you’re suffering, but thankfully I don’t have to!”
Nailed it.
Exactly - so self serving!
Are you enjoying talking to yourself? How about answering the question you keep ignoring. What benefit is there to society in this? It should be simple to explain. Why can’t you?
read much?? It was already answered. The benefit is that companies get their full time attention and work product back from the folks who have not been putting in 40 hours and full attention while wfh. No, I don't want to pay to do your kids homework, or laundry during meetings or workout between calls. I want you to earn your freaking paycheck. Go work somewhere else if you cant understand this,
People are working at home. We know YOU can’t do it. But the rest of us are. Now, explain what the benefit is of removing WFH for people who do their work just fine that way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I will be willing to RTO but I will not work a minute early or a minute later than scheduled if I do. And, no laptops will be taken home at night or for snow days.
If they want to go back to 1990, then we go back to 1990.
This. I will check my boxes and nothing more. Need me to stay late? No, sorry, I have an appointment. Log on at home for call with out west coast colleagues. Sorry, I have an appointment.
I do all that now as I View that as a trade off for my flexibility. But that will end immediately upon RTO.
Get 'em tiger. Way to be a team player. You are soooo cool.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is a common set-up: two parents out of the house 10 hours a day, scrambling to provide care for their own children. We make it work because we have to.
And what benefit is there to society in making more people have to deal with this?
So your question (why should I have to suffer like you, essentially) comes across as a bit… privileged to those of us who do essential in-person jobs.
Nice try. Answer the question. What benefit is there to society in making other people’s lives worse?
You mean: What if we are all as self-serving as you?
Who is going to teach your children? Who is going to provide after-school activities and childcare for you? Who is going to be at the urgent care when you or your child get sick?
See, it’s really tiresome for those of us who work for the betterment of society (which often has to be done in person) to hear the woe-is-me from somebody who may have to experience a bit of what we do. It’s hard to feel sympathy when your argument is “well, you’re suffering, but thankfully I don’t have to!”
Nailed it.
Exactly - so self serving!
Are you enjoying talking to yourself? How about answering the question you keep ignoring. What benefit is there to society in this? It should be simple to explain. Why can’t you?
read much?? It was already answered. The benefit is that companies get their full time attention and work product back from the folks who have not been putting in 40 hours and full attention while wfh. No, I don't want to pay to do your kids homework, or laundry during meetings or workout between calls. I want you to earn your freaking paycheck. Go work somewhere else if you cant understand this,
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is a common set-up: two parents out of the house 10 hours a day, scrambling to provide care for their own children. We make it work because we have to.
And what benefit is there to society in making more people have to deal with this?
So your question (why should I have to suffer like you, essentially) comes across as a bit… privileged to those of us who do essential in-person jobs.
Nice try. Answer the question. What benefit is there to society in making other people’s lives worse?
You mean: What if we are all as self-serving as you?
Who is going to teach your children? Who is going to provide after-school activities and childcare for you? Who is going to be at the urgent care when you or your child get sick?
See, it’s really tiresome for those of us who work for the betterment of society (which often has to be done in person) to hear the woe-is-me from somebody who may have to experience a bit of what we do. It’s hard to feel sympathy when your argument is “well, you’re suffering, but thankfully I don’t have to!”
Nailed it.
Exactly - so self serving!
Are you enjoying talking to yourself? How about answering the question you keep ignoring. What benefit is there to society in this? It should be simple to explain. Why can’t you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I will be willing to RTO but I will not work a minute early or a minute later than scheduled if I do. And, no laptops will be taken home at night or for snow days.
If they want to go back to 1990, then we go back to 1990.
This. I will check my boxes and nothing more. Need me to stay late? No, sorry, I have an appointment. Log on at home for call with out west coast colleagues. Sorry, I have an appointment.
I do all that now as I View that as a trade off for my flexibility. But that will end immediately upon RTO.
Anonymous wrote:This feels pretty depressing and frustrating for me, in the context of having worked all weekend so far on a litigation filing due Tuesday. We are currently 3 days in office, two at home, which works well for me. I guess I will see how the new administration changes the substance of my work (TBD, as it is not clear how our work will be viewed - we are not DEI, the environment, civil rights etc.). Overall, I think there is a stronger chance that I will not like the way things go, and move on, but RTO is just one piece of a many faceted issue.
Anonymous wrote:I will be willing to RTO but I will not work a minute early or a minute later than scheduled if I do. And, no laptops will be taken home at night or for snow days.
If they want to go back to 1990, then we go back to 1990.