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Do you enjoy your job?

I am not in a comfortable situation in mine. It is a bit toxic tbh. The rest of it seems normal - so many meetings, everyone fumbling around trying to meet the goals that shift around. I do like the parts where I get to write code though:-).

Nobody enjoys 100% of every day and every activity. But do you enjoy your job... mostly?

25 comments
  • I have a job that I hired on to 30 years ago off of a want ad in the local newspaper (google it, that's how it used to work) and thought to myself - "I'll be out of here in a few months".

    I like the freedom from office/meeting shit (although they try to pollute it with that), I get to spend most of my time in customer-facing engagement (which is mostly awesome). Find work that you can enjoy even if working feels toxic (which it almost always does).

  • My job sucks but I really love it. It's the best job I've ever had compensation wise but it is stressful as hell and I'm pretty sure it's turning my hair gray. It's also the best job in turn of meaning, I can actually make an impact for people.

    I'm planning on moving up in the company, I'm missing where I started as I take more of a background role a little but I can't have worked front-line forever for many reasons.

    • That sounds... I don't even know. Wonderful and terrifying at the same time!? Don't let it destroy you in the process, but if you can handle it then that's great! 👍

  • No, but it's more the conditions than the job itself.

    Baking can be enjoyable and actually kinda meditative. On the rare days that I get to just do that, it's nice.

    But my average day is spent fixing what's been forgotten/ignored, and filling in every role no one else felt like doing that day. All four morning people can be there, I'll still have their leftover work to do as they all start getting ready to leave once I come in for the afternoon, and whatever was already planned for me.

    They all leave their work space worse than a kindergarten class on fingerpainting day. Yeah, of course you need to leave an hour early, again. Your table is caked in 2 feet of icing and there's a pile of dishes pouring out the sink.

    My managers shouldn't be allowed to work together, they spend more time talking about their personal issues than they do actually working.

    I have spent months telling them that I'm burnt, we need at least one more night person, and on weekends having two together would help. They got another morning person instead. All while telling me we're getting in "so many applications".

    Our company wants to sit there and praise us for being the top preformers in our area, but it's more important that the larger, but worse preforming, stores get all the new equipment. We can just put up with equipment they don't even make parts for any more. I work with the Ovens of Theseus, it's put together with entirely refurbished parts picked out of the salvage yard at this point. They also can't hold temperature for shit.

    It feels even worse, because it's not something I feel like I can talk about anymore. I know my friends are tired of hearing me bitch about work, I can't talk to my coworkers.

    • Yikes!? Ultimately it sounds like you are expected to either "take it or leave it", doing more work than them e.g. if you have to clean up after both them and yourself and also your planned work and also any of theirs. I've heard that about baking: it's toxic.

      I hope you can figure something out, like maybe you can switch to the morning shift yourself? That might not be as ideal for your circumstances, but it sounds like "ideal" is out the window entirely at this point, and you are trying to simply survive somehow.

  • I used to be in the B2B tech industry and even though I liked what I did within my team for a living, it always felt like I wasn't contributing anything of substance to society. Then everyone in the tech industry was laid off so I nabbed a job in the healthcare industry. I knew going in that I might be contributing negatively to society, but I was desperate and beggars can't be choosers. I was hoping the layoffs would have blown over by now and I'd be able to start looking again, but the layoffs are STILL happening. And now that the whole UHC situation has happened, I feel like I'm walking on eggshells all the time. I still like my team and the things I do within that team, but I loath my company and will jump ship the second I'm able. It's really a shame too as I feel I've done all my best work so far at this company and have grown a lot in just 2 years. But I can't stomach contributing to evil for longer than I have to.

  • I like my job. I WFH, and will never go back to full time office. I know an Amazon employee that's pissed because they're forcing everyone to RTO and being shitty about it. The shittiness is the point though, because they're trying to drive wages down by getting people to voluntarily leave. I've found that toxic workplaces aren't worth the paycheck, and any workplace forcing RTO without an actually good reason is toxic.

    I will say that there's some chaos and mess in pretty much every job. If anyone yells at you (or anyone) about it instead of handling it like an adult though, GTFO. I've worked for that sort of person and it's never worth it.

    • I've tried to stick it out for a long time but yeah. The trouble is that my last position was that way too, and the one before that. I'm terrible at detecting such in advance, especially when they present well or even change after I'm hired.

      I had a fantastic boss once, but she got booted herself - get this, for being too kind to her workers, telling her boss that no she would not overwork us. The system so commonly seems designed to suck the soul out of if not people then at least roles like managers.

      But not everywhere is like that.:-)

  • No, but I’ve never enjoyed any of my career paths, even though they’re ones I set out to pursue. Programmer to Designer to Video Editor, I think I just enjoyed the climb.

25 comments