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- Xref: sparky alt.support:1222 misc.jobs.misc:5817
- Newsgroups: alt.support,misc.jobs.misc
- Path: sparky!uunet!boulder!tigger!bear
- From: bear@tigger.cs.Colorado.EDU (Bear Giles)
- Subject: Re: life and work
- Message-ID: <1992Aug12.233447.28709@colorado.edu>
- Sender: news@colorado.edu (The Daily Planet)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: tigger.cs.colorado.edu
- Organization: National Oceanic & Atmospheric Adminstration / Boulder Labs
- References: <9208042336.AA12811@apple.com>
- Date: Wed, 12 Aug 1992 23:34:47 GMT
- Lines: 51
-
- In article <9208042336.AA12811@apple.com> anonymous@APPLE.COM writes:
- >>If you become frustrated with it as a job, then it has ceased to be
- >>fun and it is time to move on. For the now, enjoy it.
- >
- >This raises an important question that I have struggled with. Is work
- >supposed to be enjoyable or is it something you do because you need
- >money to eat, etc? (Especially in troubled economic times.) I think
- >if you have the luxury you should try to do something you enjoy,
- >because (unless you're part time) you're gonna be there at least 8
- >hours a day, but in difficult economic times you may not have that
- >luxury and you have to take what you can get.
-
- I'm not sure "difficult economic times" makes a difference.
-
- Who I am is _reflected_ in my job and my lifestyle, but my job and
- my lifestyle do not _define_ me.
-
- "Difficult economic times" may restrict my options in employment
- and lifestyle, but they don't change _me_.
-
- >I feel fortunate that
- >I still have my job, especially since I know a lot of people who've
- >lost theirs and/or are having trouble finding jobs, but I've felt
- >unhappy with my job lately. So far I haven't had any luck finding a
- >new job. The market is very tight where I live, and for personal
- >reasons I don't want to relocate.
-
- A former coworker (from several jobs back) is still working at the
- grocery store across the street from my office. However, he is an
- "unemployed DoD/Ada programmer" who has thought about learning C
- some time, while I was unemployed less than a month under worse
- (local) economic conditions since I was an "unutilized problem
- solver" who spent my afternoons hiking in the mountains on the edge
- of town. He spends his free time at the gym; I spend my free time
- taking graduate classes for fun (as well as working out).
-
- It is possible for the economy to deteriorate to the point where
- people must accept _any_ job, but I don't think we're anywhere near
- that point yet. What I have seen is a lot of people who insist that
- "I do X in city Y," despite the fact that there are no more jobs
- fitting that tight of a description.
-
- (On the other hand, we have, ah, leaders like Dan Quayle who thought
- it was great that a (California) fast-food restaurant had a help-wanted
- sign in the window. It somehow never occured to him that nobody can
- afford to live in California on a $8/hr job unless they're willing to
- share a small apartment with roommates (and maybe not even then)).
-
-
- Bear Giles
- bear@fsl.noaa.gov
-