Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:95k/year
1920 work hours/year
= $49/hour
he's working 16 hours/day so he is really making $24/hour
TOTALLY NOT WORTH IT
It is actually probably much less than that because he is probably working additional weekend hours. Also, i should point out that many hourly jobs pay overtime after 40 hours for 1.5 time, for example. This would really be like someone making 17 bucks an hour working tons of overtime.
Anonymous wrote:95k/year
1920 work hours/year
= $49/hour
he's working 16 hours/day so he is really making $24/hour
TOTALLY NOT WORTH IT
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ditto PP who said update his resume for him and take charge of applying to jobs for him. He’s too weighed down, he can’t get out of this by himself- he needs your help.
Act as his personal assistant for a couple weeks and apply to some jobs. And maybe find a couple recruiters in his field that he can connect with to look for positions for him
I would be livid if my spouse did this for me.
not helpful.
so you would rather keep working 18 hour days with no hope and so exhausted you can't fix the situation? what's your solution?
I would continue to manage my own career. If OP has an issue she can bring it up with her spouse, but it's his career, not hers.
There isn’t a clear line between job and family now. So if the career is cutting into her quality of life she should be able to voice some concerns.
Yes voice concerns from a family perspective. Do not update his resume and start applying to positions. I am positive that her husband has his own thoughts on his current position, what he wants to change and how to get there.