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?
First, you meant "most bearable" or "least
unbearable", not "least bearable". Remote work cuts the watercooler and fingerpointing out. Commercial sector has smarter people. Intellectual STEM managers are more accurate and objective. A short stint in car sales, etc should help you deal with disgruntled clients, as will better products and genuine interest in their issues. Sometimes shares (employee-owned) or launching your own startup helps with sincere desire for the best customer experience.