Undertow
My Mail is Forwarded Here
- Messages
- 3,126
- Location
- Des Moines, IA, US
So you've finally realized your job is meaningless, unrewarding and even a little silly. You come home every night exhausted for having done very little physical work, but from being run dry by demands and protocols.
...It's not that you want to stick your finger in "the Man's" eye, it's that you DON'T want to be any more a part of the bureaucratic nightmare then necessary. You don't want to harm the people you help through your work, but you can't possibly continue working at the break-neck pace your boss (and your boss' boss) demands. You know trying to find a new job in today's market is almost definitely suicide...
...So how do you resist? Or do you resist at all? Do you quit and collect unemployment? Do you drag your heels on all of your projects and take long breaks? Do you work harder, and harder, hoping to impress the bean counters?
It seems employers, especially corporate ones, are demanding higher and higher production totals from their employees now'days. People don't have the luxury of quitting their jobs anymore than they do winning the lottery. Many of the current service-sector jobs are often nothing but paperwork and bean counting.
Let's hear your vintage thoughts on this, whether it's a historical perspective or modern with a "vintage" twist. And if you need examples, imagine a job in Communist Russia late 1950's where you're a clerk processing paperwork for some monolithic entity.
...It's not that you want to stick your finger in "the Man's" eye, it's that you DON'T want to be any more a part of the bureaucratic nightmare then necessary. You don't want to harm the people you help through your work, but you can't possibly continue working at the break-neck pace your boss (and your boss' boss) demands. You know trying to find a new job in today's market is almost definitely suicide...
...So how do you resist? Or do you resist at all? Do you quit and collect unemployment? Do you drag your heels on all of your projects and take long breaks? Do you work harder, and harder, hoping to impress the bean counters?
It seems employers, especially corporate ones, are demanding higher and higher production totals from their employees now'days. People don't have the luxury of quitting their jobs anymore than they do winning the lottery. Many of the current service-sector jobs are often nothing but paperwork and bean counting.
Let's hear your vintage thoughts on this, whether it's a historical perspective or modern with a "vintage" twist. And if you need examples, imagine a job in Communist Russia late 1950's where you're a clerk processing paperwork for some monolithic entity.