Anonymous wrote:I’ve read time management books by Laura Vanderkam and when she has people log every hour of what they’re doing, frequently it only works out to a max of like 65 hours a week of work. The rest is people eating a work dinner or taking a break or a nap recovering from that level of work. Also it’s not sustainable years on end.
People love to brag about their hours, but I just take everything people say with a grain of salt.
https://www.amazon.com/168-Hours-Have-More-Think/dp/159184410X?nodl=1&dplnkId=a918fd6a-0e95-406b-845e-937bac4319f5
Anonymous wrote:I’ve read time management books by Laura Vanderkam and when she has people log every hour of what they’re doing, frequently it only works out to a max of like 65 hours a week of work. The rest is people eating a work dinner or taking a break or a nap recovering from that level of work. Also it’s not sustainable years on end.
People love to brag about their hours, but I just take everything people say with a grain of salt.
https://www.amazon.com/168-Hours-Have-More-Think/dp/159184410X?nodl=1&dplnkId=a918fd6a-0e95-406b-845e-937bac4319f5
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Traveling, thinking about problems and arguments, being available to answer a client's or coworker's call at any time, etc. this is work too. Some jobs never stop. Even in the shower, you can't stop trying to figure out the answers to issues. Some people only stop working when they are asleep.
Its a big part of why kids and spouses complain that "even when you are here, you aren't here."
This isn’t what Op is talking about. If this is what people call 80 hours, then it is BS
I think OP's point was that it seems like at least some of the people claiming to work 80 hours a week are including things like this because it's not sustainable for most people.