Anonymous wrote:I liked the actual work but not all of the extra stuff. I found another job doing the same thing but as an individual contributor and with fewer meetings. Without all the meetings, follow-up meetings, and pre-meetings, I'm able to get everything done in much less than 40 hours. Since my job switched to virtual, I'm at home and not stuck sitting in my office so I spend the rest of the time with my children or on my own personal pursuits. I'm much happier. I don't know if I'll ever love work. It's more of a means to an end for me, but at least now I don't dread it.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe try to work at an agency like NASA where people love the mission, and their general good mood will run off on you? Lots of veterans and variety of job roles.
Anonymous wrote:You sound like an amazingly astute and well accomplished, driven professional, OP. I’d love to work with you.
Inventory what you love to do - make a list and free form this. Include non work related tasks and hobbies.
Then make a list of tasks that you abhor and recognized weaknesses.
My positive list would be: writing, research, note taking, organizing spaces, meeting people, teaching and leading, reading, mysteries, history, word games, puzzles, lists, being outside in nature, helping others
Negative: technology, math, statistics, financial planning, chemistry, being confined in a tiny space, rigid routines, shift work, micromanagement
At 52, I’m in a new career field and received a promotion to a job I love. My new role incorporates so many of the skills on my “love” list - I’m teaching and helping, I have to understand the history of the job and role, I travel to various sites and do extensive editing and writing and organizing. I work on a small team and we each delegate preferred tasks to each other.
I’m always the note taker! I’m always the editor! I’m the bubbly and enthusiastic person who gets called in to smooth ruffled feathers and to advocate for my employees by remaining calm and neutral.
I can’t believe I get paid for doing what I love. This is my wish for you, OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most people hate their jobs OP. Just focus on the money it brings
+100
Life’s a b—-h and then we die
+1. Can’t believe OP doesn’t understand that.
Or op DOES understand it and doesn’t want to spend his/her/their life wasting away. Y’all are quick to assume other peoples mental capacity here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I did everything the right way. I grew up poor & am a minority. Went to the military, got out and used the GI bill at a top undergrad. I interned on the hill. Got a prestigious fellowship for a year and then went to a top grad school. My resume is very strong and I am frequently praised for being a hard worker..but I legitimately hate working. I hate the creepy management, I hate office politics & the small 'watercooler talk', I hate that I have to put a smile on my face and deal with disgruntled clients, I hate working for the sake of working and having to fill my calendar with 40 hours even if I can effectively do all my work in 20 hours. I'm miserable trying to do this corporate grind. I left a job paying well over 100k because I have never felt so unfulfilled and dreaded going to work and not knowing what senior management was going to decide was a good idea that day. I'm not even motivated by the money like I was before.
For those of you who have experienced what I have, how did you survive? How did you end up finding something that was in that 30 hour a week time frame? Is federal side any better? Corporate? Small business?
Stop looking for money or title or whatever box you feel you have to check off. Look for work with people you genuinely like and respect. It sounds like you like work just fine. (You could not have achieved what you have already if you hated to work.) Rather, you hate working in a toxic workplace.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most people hate their jobs OP. Just focus on the money it brings
+100
Life’s a b—-h and then we die
+1. Can’t believe OP doesn’t understand that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most people hate their jobs OP. Just focus on the money it brings
+100
Life’s a b—-h and then we die
Anonymous wrote: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.
White people hate working sometimes too. Why make this about race?
Anonymous wrote:Maybe you just need a job that's not in an office all day. Something where you are out and about, or working face to face with customers or something.