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[Closed] How interested in your job are you?

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Not even a little bit. I go to work, I do work, I finish work, I go home. Work is then stricken from my mind until the next working day.


 
Posted : 11/03/2019 8:59 am
Posts: 728
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I want nothing to do with it when Friday ends. To tell the truth I want nothing to do with it when Monday starts either !

Basically this. i'm a contractor in a Head of Sales & marketing role, in a stunningly boring company. Been here 6 months, contracts just been extended another 12 months.

Part of a big group of companies, but a relatively small (sub £20m turnover) profit centre, which is hamstrung by group policy & procedure. Endlessly feels like wading through treacle.

Coupled with some very difficult team members, makes for a challenging mix.


 
Posted : 11/03/2019 9:46 am
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My job was a lot more interesting and rewarding when it was ****ing up any chance of a normal life. Now I have a life outside work the role I have is fairly tedious.


 
Posted : 11/03/2019 9:49 am
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Hmmm

Well, I worked in various network engineering and IT security roles for one of the biggest companies in the world for 12 years (an evil bank).

It paid well and was easy (usually). However, I had this overwhelming feeling that if I stayed doing that all my life I’d look back at retirement and think “wtf did you with your working life? You could have done so much more!”

So... after much deliberating, entrance exams and interviews I started a Graduate Entry Medicine accelerated med degree in September last year at the ripe old age of 38.

With a bit of luck (and so so much work) I’ll be a very, very, very, very junior doctor in 3.5 yrs.
I’ll be earning a lot less than my old salary for a further 5 yrs post graduation but *hope* that I’ll feel I’m fulfilling my potential and am doing something useful!

Eek.


 
Posted : 11/03/2019 10:04 am
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I used to enjoy my job, back when it involved actually doing things, but now I hate it with a passion because I am "Management". However, like a few others have posted, it's too well paid for me to leave it without rethinking quite a few aspects of my life, but I'm pretty sure that once I've finished paying off the house in a couple of years, I'll not hang around.

I yearn for a job where I feel like I'm actually making a difference to things, rather than just helping a rich firm get richer. Naive, perhaps, but it's a real concern to me at the moment.


 
Posted : 11/03/2019 10:16 am
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I yearn for a job where I feel like I’m actually making a difference to things, rather than just helping a rich firm get richer. Naive, perhaps, but it’s a real concern to me at the moment.

That’s exactly how I felt. I’d say look for a change sooner than later else you may convince yourself it’s too late then!
It’s not easy but it’s not impossible to go from a well paid employee to student/trainee/lower paid job. We have two small mini RRR’s , mortgage , cat, hamster , debt and so on..

We only get once chance at all this after all.


 
Posted : 11/03/2019 10:23 am
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I was very interested and enjoying it until a new technical manager came on board and told me and my colleagues our 30 years of experience was worth nothing and we were no longer allowed to talk to R&D staff about what customers wanted to buy.


 
Posted : 11/03/2019 10:45 am
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Project Manager for an Engineering Company that builds things to go on Navy Ships... I like the actual job role, but dislike being reliant on people who care less than i do, and can't bare the big company corporate nonsense and the departmental politics.
I've travelled a bit, which is interesting, but takes me away from the wife/kids, so would be happy not to do much more of it.

I got shifted to work for an over-promoted idiot in France a year ago, which is sapping my enthusiasm.

But, as others have said, it pays well, i generally get left alone, i usually plan my own day/workload and the whole package of car/healthcare/reasonable pension/etc makes it hard to leave.

I'm definitely a "37 hours per week and not a lot more" type of person, but I've still got a huge mortgage to pay off, and kids to get through school/college so won't be bailing out anytime soon.


 
Posted : 11/03/2019 10:50 am
Posts: 0
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RopeyReignRider

Member
Hmmm

Well, I worked in various network engineering and IT security roles for one of the biggest companies in the world for 12 years (an evil bank).

It paid well and was easy (usually). However, I had this overwhelming feeling that if I stayed doing that all my life I’d look back at retirement and think “wtf did you with your working life? You could have done so much more!”

So… after much deliberating, entrance exams and interviews I started a Graduate Entry Medicine accelerated med degree in September last year at the ripe old age of 38.

With a bit of luck (and so so much work) I’ll be a very, very, very, very junior doctor in 3.5 yrs.
I’ll be earning a lot less than my old salary for a further 5 yrs post graduation but *hope* that I’ll feel I’m fulfilling my potential and am doing something useful!

Eek.

Tell me more? I didn't even know this was possible! This is almost exactly my situation and what I've been thinking about.


 
Posted : 11/03/2019 11:21 am
Posts: 7630
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I did a geology degree and am a geologist now - I love doing geology stuff, but not necessarily my job. I've had three jobs in it now and one was amazing, the other two have been pretty rough. It's been people, not the subject, that have made my job unenjoyable. I'm pretty engaged with it - I join in webinars, present at universities, that sort of thing. I'm pretty lucky really.


 
Posted : 11/03/2019 11:44 am
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Tell me more? I didn’t even know this was possible! This is almost exactly my situation and what I’ve been thinking about.

PM’d you fatdaddy!


 
Posted : 11/03/2019 11:52 am
Posts: 4593
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when I was a self employed musician/producer/DJ/etc - very interested. Spent all my waking hours thinking about it, ate, lived and breathed it.

Now I'm an office monkey. It's fine, sometimes even enjoyable, but I'm not too emotionally invested. Spend all my non-office hours thinking about music, getting into my studio where possible etc etc.

I sometimes wonder whether I should care more about my job, but the pay is enough, the perks are nice (free drum practise rooms(!)), the work-life balance isn't too bad, so....?


 
Posted : 11/03/2019 12:21 pm
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My job revolves around Westminster, so much as I'd like to switch off at the weekends, given I also quite like R4, I can't really get away from it...


 
Posted : 11/03/2019 12:24 pm
Posts: 2735
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I don’t mind my job. 35hr week, reasonable pay and holidays. If a manager calls me after 3:31 pm though my first question is are you paying me overtime. The answers no so I hang up telling them to call at 8 A.M. the next working day.


 
Posted : 11/03/2019 12:27 pm
 beej
Posts: 4223
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I'd say I'm pretty interested, but I'm good at switching off evenings and weekends. I don't have anything work related on FB, Twitter but I do follow stuff that gets shared on LinkedIn.

We are also very strong on training and development - we're encouraged to book days out for this, we have various courses to complete (in work time) each year and lots of opportunity to focus on what we find interesting.

I'm customer facing, aligned to 5 large customers (8K - 30K people), so I'll also spend time on what's happening with their businesses and the industry overall. Our tech changes so quickly and customers can be very switched on, so I either have to be slightly ahead of them on announcements or very good at looking things up quickly while I'm on a call.


 
Posted : 11/03/2019 12:57 pm
Posts: 2011
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I tolerate my job but that’s it. Electrical engineer was ok 10 years ago when i was an intermediate but now it’s just stressful, ungratifying, hours are getting longer and I just yearn to get home and switch off.
Hate the clients we work with as well(developers mainly), bunch of wealthy arseholes.
Might go back to being a sparky once the mortgage is paid and hopefully the kids start paying keep.


 
Posted : 11/03/2019 12:58 pm
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I am retired.
Do nothing all week and get the weekends off.
Still miffed about the 47 years of boredom well 45 if you take out the interesting bits.


 
Posted : 11/03/2019 1:03 pm
Posts: 5051
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I’m a long distance coach driver.
I enjoy it, precisely because i take absolutely nothing to do with it when I’m not there.
I’ve been added to umpteen FB groups over the years, as soon as I realise that has happened i leave the group.
Works for me.
FB is for keeping in touch with my friends.
Work colleagues are not friends.


 
Posted : 11/03/2019 1:04 pm
Posts: 4155
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As a dolphin trainer I have a wonderful time at work with the only downside being the constant aroma of mackerel. But this doesn't stop me from enjoying watching episodes of Flipper back to back at the week end.


 
Posted : 11/03/2019 4:08 pm
Posts: 4593
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As a dolphin trainer I have a wonderful time at work with the only downside being the constant aroma of mackerel. But this doesn’t stop me from enjoying watching episodes of Flipper back to back at the week end.

😆


 
Posted : 11/03/2019 4:22 pm
Posts: 52609
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FB is for keeping in touch with my friends.
Work colleagues are not friends.

I always find that a sad thing, the 2 are not exclusive in most places and it's great to meet new people for me. We try and head out as a group and it's good fun.

On the doing nothing/thinking nothing about work when the clock stops, I guess it depends on what your work is, at a point I am what I have done, the people I know through work are important and the things I have done keep me linked to future opportunities, that is part of what makes me employable and the rewards I get for that. Post conference beers and networking events have connected a lot of things and opened doors for me.

I know a few people in the same sector and we actually have plenty of interesting conversations (to us) about what we do. They made a film about part of it - the efficient processing line part


 
Posted : 11/03/2019 4:32 pm
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