Anonymous wrote:HS teacher
In my case about 99% of my day is all about work.
no exaggeration
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Reading your responses, I get jealous. Lol.
I am a nanny to a very active toddler who is starting to skip his nap, so I work ten hours straight on the clock with no 15 min. or lunch breaks.
I am constantly in motion, engaging him. I even have him follow me into the restroom. Sorry TMI!!
I wish I had a 1/2 hour dedicated lunch break or anything break to rest up, but I do not.
I miss having a job like that where I could move around. Like when I nannied and worked in restaurants. I used to be much slimmer until I started sitting at a desk 40-45 hours a week. On the bright side, I do make a lot more money.
On busy days I work 7-8+ hours. Slow days can be as little as 1-2. I work in staffing so there's not much I can do without coordinating with other people, so I spend a lot of time waiting around.
Anonymous wrote:Reading your responses, I get jealous. Lol.
I am a nanny to a very active toddler who is starting to skip his nap, so I work ten hours straight on the clock with no 15 min. or lunch breaks.
I am constantly in motion, engaging him. I even have him follow me into the restroom. Sorry TMI!!
I wish I had a 1/2 hour dedicated lunch break or anything break to rest up, but I do not.
4 hours now that I'm on am open floor plan. I have constant interruptions and am unable to concentrate to perform real work. Most of my day is now talking to my coworkers or attempting to concentrate. When my coworkers are speaking loudly on the phone I usually surf the web.
Before an open floor plan, 7 hours.
Anonymous wrote:HS teacher
In my case about 99% of my day is all about work.
no exaggeration
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: I just stare at my desk, but it looks like I'm working. I do that for probably another hour after lunch too, I'd say in a given week I probably only do about fifteen minutes of real, actual, work.
I see what you did there. And I laughed!