Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am the PP who mentioned that I went back to my job one block from the White House on 9-12. I think some of these posts are a little mixed up. If people were working otherwise horrible jobs and the events of 9-11 made them feel that it was time to make a change, that is one thing. But I do not think that having to work that day, or the day after, makes something a horrible job in and of itself. The country kept moving and the jobs kept getting done. Nothing "bad" about that
I think those of us who were working downtown and legitimately wondering where the next shoe (or plane, as it were) was going to drop, and were not "holding it together" for people suffering more directly from the attacks or otherwise engaged in critical time sensitive work, were entitled to work or go home as felt appropriate, and I think any firm that made people work for the sake of billing a few more hours that day exhibited a lack of perspective that probably made it a bad place to work.
the next day, eh.
Anonymous wrote:I am the PP who mentioned that I went back to my job one block from the White House on 9-12. I think some of these posts are a little mixed up. If people were working otherwise horrible jobs and the events of 9-11 made them feel that it was time to make a change, that is one thing. But I do not think that having to work that day, or the day after, makes something a horrible job in and of itself. The country kept moving and the jobs kept getting done. Nothing "bad" about that
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That's good for you. Really. It was enough for me to realize that I wanted to spend my day with my kids doing things important to my family (not my client).
I didn't have kids at the time, so save the holier-than-thou atitude for someone else. I still work in BL and I do have kids now, but it would not have somehow transformed it into a horrible job for me. It was a horrible day. Many clients lost people that day. Part of my job was holding it together for them, and I would do it again
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That's good for you. Really. It was enough for me to realize that I wanted to spend my day with my kids doing things important to my family (not my client).
I didn't have kids at the time, so save the holier-than-thou atitude for someone else. I still work in BL and I do have kids now, but it would not have somehow transformed it into a horrible job for me. It was a horrible day. Many clients lost people that day. Part of my job was holding it together for them, and I would do it again
Anonymous wrote:That's good for you. Really. It was enough for me to realize that I wanted to spend my day with my kids doing things important to my family (not my client).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know a team of litigators who kept working on 9-11 because they had a court filing due.
Totally different, although most courts ended up closing.
DC firm overlooking the White House and DC evacuations. Could see smoke fromPentagon burning and court was ITC (in DC). I quit shortly thereafter.
We closed a deal that morning in NY in a building across from the WTC (1 Liberty). You do what you have to do. Nobody really knew what to do anyway. Eventually we evacuated. It wasn't a horrible job. It was a horrible DAY.
Anonymous wrote:I worked at a horrible law firm. This one partner set up a nanny cam in another associate's office (also female, who worked for her). Another associate noticed it and asked what it was.
This other partner insisted that the associates working for her department input their billables every night before leaving. She would randomly print out a list of everyone's billables that month to date and walk around berating people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a lawyer who worked at a small non-profit on Pennsylvania Ave. during 9/11. I worked the next day and every weekday after. I do not think that having to work makes it a "bad law job" or any kind of bad job. Thaw country, from garage workers and retail through government and private sector kept working. Unless your family, workplace, or mode of transportation was directly impacted, what is the problem with continuing to work.
Some people see this a a loss of perspective. And you can't see it if you've lost it. What works for you isn't universal for sure.
I don't see it as a loss of perspective. Its always struck me as stranger when people cite a major event as the "moment" that they realized their life needs dramatic re-balancing. Did it really take a major terrorist event to make it apparent that spending time with loved ones is important? To each his or her own, but I find it moderately annoying when someone who's had this sort of epiphany acts as though they've realized something all the other drones haven't, and therefore others have lost perspective. All you know, from your experience, is that at some point you lost perspective and somehow refound it. Perhaps others never missed the point to begin with, and are simply comfortable and happy with how they've balanced their lives.
+1. There's something faintly pedantic about such posts, not to mention unseemly about people capitalizing on tragedies as a pretext to claim the moral high ground.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a lawyer who worked at a small non-profit on Pennsylvania Ave. during 9/11. I worked the next day and every weekday after. I do not think that having to work makes it a "bad law job" or any kind of bad job. Thaw country, from garage workers and retail through government and private sector kept working. Unless your family, workplace, or mode of transportation was directly impacted, what is the problem with continuing to work.
Some people see this a a loss of perspective. And you can't see it if you've lost it. What works for you isn't universal for sure.
I don't see it as a loss of perspective. Its always struck me as stranger when people cite a major event as the "moment" that they realized their life needs dramatic re-balancing. Did it really take a major terrorist event to make it apparent that spending time with loved ones is important? To each his or her own, but I find it moderately annoying when someone who's had this sort of epiphany acts as though they've realized something all the other drones haven't, and therefore others have lost perspective. All you know, from your experience, is that at some point you lost perspective and somehow refound it. Perhaps others never missed the point to begin with, and are simply comfortable and happy with how they've balanced their lives.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a lawyer who worked at a small non-profit on Pennsylvania Ave. during 9/11. I worked the next day and every weekday after. I do not think that having to work makes it a "bad law job" or any kind of bad job. Thaw country, from garage workers and retail through government and private sector kept working. Unless your family, workplace, or mode of transportation was directly impacted, what is the problem with continuing to work.
Some people see this a a loss of perspective. And you can't see it if you've lost it. What works for you isn't universal for sure.
I don't see it as a loss of perspective. Its always struck me as stranger when people cite a major event as the "moment" that they realized their life needs dramatic re-balancing. Did it really take a major terrorist event to make it apparent that spending time with loved ones is important? To each his or her own, but I find it moderately annoying when someone who's had this sort of epiphany acts as though they've realized something all the other drones haven't, and therefore others have lost perspective. All you know, from your experience, is that at some point you lost perspective and somehow refound it. Perhaps others never missed the point to begin with, and are simply comfortable and happy with how they've balanced their lives.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a lawyer who worked at a small non-profit on Pennsylvania Ave. during 9/11. I worked the next day and every weekday after. I do not think that having to work makes it a "bad law job" or any kind of bad job. Thaw country, from garage workers and retail through government and private sector kept working. Unless your family, workplace, or mode of transportation was directly impacted, what is the problem with continuing to work.
Some people see this a a loss of perspective. And you can't see it if you've lost it. What works for you isn't universal for sure.
Anonymous wrote:I am a lawyer who worked at a small non-profit on Pennsylvania Ave. during 9/11. I worked the next day and every weekday after. I do not think that having to work makes it a "bad law job" or any kind of bad job. Thaw country, from garage workers and retail through government and private sector kept working. Unless your family, workplace, or mode of transportation was directly impacted, what is the problem with continuing to work.