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The New Coffee Room

  1. TNCR
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  3. Love the work, hate the job?

Love the work, hate the job?

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  • George KG George K

    @Doctor-Phibes said in Love the work, hate the job?:

    I've heard medical folks having similar feelings.

    đź‘‹

    In our case, it became a situation where there were more and more silly burdens placed on how things were done. If we didn't ask a totally irrelevant question during pre-op evaluation, and tik a box, Medicare would ding us a certain percentage.

    It became much less about taking care of people and more about making sure the forms were filled out correctly.

    I haven't set foot in an operating room in 8 years, 3 months, and I miss it not at all. I can only imagine how bad it is now.

    I have nothing to suggest, other than to urge you to get out when you can.

    bachophileB Offline
    bachophileB Offline
    bachophile
    wrote on last edited by
    #11

    @George-K said in Love the work, hate the job?:

    @Doctor-Phibes said in Love the work, hate the job?:

    I've heard medical folks having similar feelings.

    đź‘‹

    I haven't set foot in an operating room in 8 years, 3 months, and I miss it not at all. I can only imagine how bad it is now.

    Worse

    1 Reply Last reply
    • Doctor PhibesD Doctor Phibes

      Forgive the self-indulgence, but the 'The Dear Self' discussion about following your passion got me thinking, and I know we've had these discussions before. Still.....

      When I started doing my current job back in 1989 (oh God), I actually really liked it, and thought I'd found something that I could really get to grips with. It turned out I was pretty good at it. It was stressful, as are most jobs with direct customer contact, but the engineering was challenging and really quite interesting, and it was such a niche-skill that so far (touch-wood) I've never been laid off, and have somehow managed to wangle getting jobs in three different countries.

      Something has happened in the last 20-odd years, almost all of it brought on by the "improvements" in technology. The actual job, the bit that used to take up about 80% of what I did, now takes up about 20%. The rest of it consists of wrestling with increasingly unfriendly and complicated software tools, and I use the word 'tool' in it's loosest possible term.

      I've heard medical folks having similar feelings.

      Are all jobs like this now? It feels like the tech that was supposed to help us is slowly stifling all the joy.

      Aqua LetiferA Offline
      Aqua LetiferA Offline
      Aqua Letifer
      wrote on last edited by
      #12

      @Doctor-Phibes said in Love the work, hate the job?:

      Are all jobs like this now? It feels like the tech that was supposed to help us is slowly stifling all the joy.

      First of all, sorry this is going on in your neck of the woods. It's tough to be in the middle; not at the start of a career, not right at the end. (But hey, I'm in the same boat, hooray!)

      I had a decent job around 2008 or so. Then weird shit started happening. I had a meeting with my designer, and her desk was cleared out. A couple weeks later I had to speak to my marketing person and the same thing happened. Huh. Okay, well, I was thinking about getting a Master's anyway; suppose I might as well get on that. I helped my employers hire my replacement, who along with the rest of the company was laid off after a merger 4 months later.

      Awhile later, I worked in a small town that was completely propped up by the industry I moved to work for. My co-workers started out their lives in the day care across the street that was run by the business. The sports teams and pretty much the leagues were funded by them, too.

      Our office was on the third floor. One particular morning, I was taking the stairs—I always took the stairs, it had a far better view than the elevators—and there was no second floor. 150 people lost their jobs overnight. Today, the company no longer exists. Some of my former co-workers started making the 2.5-hour commute into the city where their new corporate overlords were located.

      Every day in which I'm employed is a day in which I'm amazed. That being said, I'm neck deep with problems related to AI. But I use it frequently in a shitload of capacities. I know exactly what its capabilities are and are not. Not my job, or even my career, but the very concept of what I know how to do is under threat. Not really by the technology, but by what people ignorant of the technology think it's able to do. They honestly think a $15 a month subscription makes them gods. It's perverse.

      This is just a natural progression of the path we've been on since I've been alive, maybe since ever. It's like what George Carlin said about cocaine. At first it's all pleasure with no pain; over time, it switches on you.

      As an example, when the iPod first came out, it seemed extraordinary. “1,000 songs in my pocket? Hell yes, sign me up!” What the commercials didn’t say was that my friends and I would stop swapping albums like we did with tapes and CDs. That I would I stop going to music stores. That Spotify would go to work putting those stores out of business. That it would then start leveraging AI against musicians to put them out of business, too. That my friends would no longer see the point in seeing each other in person because we have Facebook now. That the rare times we do see each other, we don't go to shows anymore, and they're either on their phones or instead of telling me a funny story, act exasperated that I didn't see their reel made of said story.

      In my opinion, in both our work and personal lives, technology has brought us to peak choice and convenience. We have too much of it now. We're addicted, but it's no longer doing us any favors.

      Please love yourself.

      89th8 1 Reply Last reply
      • Doctor PhibesD Doctor Phibes

        Forgive the self-indulgence, but the 'The Dear Self' discussion about following your passion got me thinking, and I know we've had these discussions before. Still.....

        When I started doing my current job back in 1989 (oh God), I actually really liked it, and thought I'd found something that I could really get to grips with. It turned out I was pretty good at it. It was stressful, as are most jobs with direct customer contact, but the engineering was challenging and really quite interesting, and it was such a niche-skill that so far (touch-wood) I've never been laid off, and have somehow managed to wangle getting jobs in three different countries.

        Something has happened in the last 20-odd years, almost all of it brought on by the "improvements" in technology. The actual job, the bit that used to take up about 80% of what I did, now takes up about 20%. The rest of it consists of wrestling with increasingly unfriendly and complicated software tools, and I use the word 'tool' in it's loosest possible term.

        I've heard medical folks having similar feelings.

        Are all jobs like this now? It feels like the tech that was supposed to help us is slowly stifling all the joy.

        A Offline
        A Offline
        AndyD
        wrote on last edited by AndyD
        #13

        @Doctor-Phibes said

        feels like the tech that was supposed to help us is slowly stifling all the joy.

        It started in the 80's and is still getting worse in every way. My recent solution is literally to laugh at the ineptitude of tech when it fails, and celebrate when real people efficiently solve things.

        So I need to dispose of 5 bags of asbestos (actually 1962 bathroom lino tiles, with brown, less than 1% in lining).
        "Easy" said the woman in the recycling centre, go online, you'll get an email with permission for tomorrow.
        Four days later in a loop of an old/new email, no working password and no way to rejoin, I call the council and after 1min20 of blah-blah get a "please say
        what you want"
        Hazardous waste" say I,
        Transferred to garden waste automatic payments (which I was told later wasn't actually working today)
        Hang up.

        Redial, wait 1.20, say "help help help", getting through to customer services.
        Person hears me laughing at my problem, tells me her woes that the system is going slow etc...
        then solves everything in 2 minutes.

        But tech can be really wonderful, freeing up our time so we can be creative

        Screenshot_20250129-062928_Facebook.jpg

        89th8 1 Reply Last reply
        • Doctor PhibesD Doctor Phibes

          Forgive the self-indulgence, but the 'The Dear Self' discussion about following your passion got me thinking, and I know we've had these discussions before. Still.....

          When I started doing my current job back in 1989 (oh God), I actually really liked it, and thought I'd found something that I could really get to grips with. It turned out I was pretty good at it. It was stressful, as are most jobs with direct customer contact, but the engineering was challenging and really quite interesting, and it was such a niche-skill that so far (touch-wood) I've never been laid off, and have somehow managed to wangle getting jobs in three different countries.

          Something has happened in the last 20-odd years, almost all of it brought on by the "improvements" in technology. The actual job, the bit that used to take up about 80% of what I did, now takes up about 20%. The rest of it consists of wrestling with increasingly unfriendly and complicated software tools, and I use the word 'tool' in it's loosest possible term.

          I've heard medical folks having similar feelings.

          Are all jobs like this now? It feels like the tech that was supposed to help us is slowly stifling all the joy.

          89th8 Offline
          89th8 Offline
          89th
          wrote on last edited by
          #14

          @Doctor-Phibes said in Love the work, hate the job?:

          Are all jobs like this now? It feels like the tech that was supposed to help us is slowly stifling all the joy.

          There seems to be a relentless pursuit of making things faster and faster. To quote shawshank... the world got itself in one big damn hurry. A byproduct of this seems to be more technology and less human input (the joy).

          1 Reply Last reply
          • Aqua LetiferA Aqua Letifer

            @Doctor-Phibes said in Love the work, hate the job?:

            Are all jobs like this now? It feels like the tech that was supposed to help us is slowly stifling all the joy.

            First of all, sorry this is going on in your neck of the woods. It's tough to be in the middle; not at the start of a career, not right at the end. (But hey, I'm in the same boat, hooray!)

            I had a decent job around 2008 or so. Then weird shit started happening. I had a meeting with my designer, and her desk was cleared out. A couple weeks later I had to speak to my marketing person and the same thing happened. Huh. Okay, well, I was thinking about getting a Master's anyway; suppose I might as well get on that. I helped my employers hire my replacement, who along with the rest of the company was laid off after a merger 4 months later.

            Awhile later, I worked in a small town that was completely propped up by the industry I moved to work for. My co-workers started out their lives in the day care across the street that was run by the business. The sports teams and pretty much the leagues were funded by them, too.

            Our office was on the third floor. One particular morning, I was taking the stairs—I always took the stairs, it had a far better view than the elevators—and there was no second floor. 150 people lost their jobs overnight. Today, the company no longer exists. Some of my former co-workers started making the 2.5-hour commute into the city where their new corporate overlords were located.

            Every day in which I'm employed is a day in which I'm amazed. That being said, I'm neck deep with problems related to AI. But I use it frequently in a shitload of capacities. I know exactly what its capabilities are and are not. Not my job, or even my career, but the very concept of what I know how to do is under threat. Not really by the technology, but by what people ignorant of the technology think it's able to do. They honestly think a $15 a month subscription makes them gods. It's perverse.

            This is just a natural progression of the path we've been on since I've been alive, maybe since ever. It's like what George Carlin said about cocaine. At first it's all pleasure with no pain; over time, it switches on you.

            As an example, when the iPod first came out, it seemed extraordinary. “1,000 songs in my pocket? Hell yes, sign me up!” What the commercials didn’t say was that my friends and I would stop swapping albums like we did with tapes and CDs. That I would I stop going to music stores. That Spotify would go to work putting those stores out of business. That it would then start leveraging AI against musicians to put them out of business, too. That my friends would no longer see the point in seeing each other in person because we have Facebook now. That the rare times we do see each other, we don't go to shows anymore, and they're either on their phones or instead of telling me a funny story, act exasperated that I didn't see their reel made of said story.

            In my opinion, in both our work and personal lives, technology has brought us to peak choice and convenience. We have too much of it now. We're addicted, but it's no longer doing us any favors.

            89th8 Offline
            89th8 Offline
            89th
            wrote on last edited by
            #15

            @Aqua-Letifer said in Love the work, hate the job?:

            @Doctor-Phibes said in Love the work, hate the job?:

            Are all jobs like this now? It feels like the tech that was supposed to help us is slowly stifling all the joy.

            First of all, sorry this is going on in your neck of the woods. It's tough to be in the middle; not at the start of a career, not right at the end. (But hey, I'm in the same boat, hooray!)

            I had a decent job around 2008 or so. Then weird shit started happening. I had a meeting with my designer, and her desk was cleared out. A couple weeks later I had to speak to my marketing person and the same thing happened. Huh. Okay, well, I was thinking about getting a Master's anyway; suppose I might as well get on that. I helped my employers hire my replacement, who along with the rest of the company was laid off after a merger 4 months later.

            Awhile later, I worked in a small town that was completely propped up by the industry I moved to work for. My co-workers started out their lives in the day care across the street that was run by the business. The sports teams and pretty much the leagues were funded by them, too.

            Our office was on the third floor. One particular morning, I was taking the stairs—I always took the stairs, it had a far better view than the elevators—and there was no second floor. 150 people lost their jobs overnight. Today, the company no longer exists. Some of my former co-workers started making the 2.5-hour commute into the city where their new corporate overlords were located.

            Every day in which I'm employed is a day in which I'm amazed. That being said, I'm neck deep with problems related to AI. But I use it frequently in a shitload of capacities. I know exactly what its capabilities are and are not. Not my job, or even my career, but the very concept of what I know how to do is under threat. Not really by the technology, but by what people ignorant of the technology think it's able to do. They honestly think a $15 a month subscription makes them gods. It's perverse.

            This is just a natural progression of the path we've been on since I've been alive, maybe since ever. It's like what George Carlin said about cocaine. At first it's all pleasure with no pain; over time, it switches on you.

            As an example, when the iPod first came out, it seemed extraordinary. “1,000 songs in my pocket? Hell yes, sign me up!” What the commercials didn’t say was that my friends and I would stop swapping albums like we did with tapes and CDs. That I would I stop going to music stores. That Spotify would go to work putting those stores out of business. That it would then start leveraging AI against musicians to put them out of business, too. That my friends would no longer see the point in seeing each other in person because we have Facebook now. That the rare times we do see each other, we don't go to shows anymore, and they're either on their phones or instead of telling me a funny story, act exasperated that I didn't see their reel made of said story.

            In my opinion, in both our work and personal lives, technology has brought us to peak choice and convenience. We have too much of it now. We're addicted, but it's no longer doing us any favors.

            Good post man. It's almost like the ability to unplug, or go analog, or just slow down and sit without looking at a screen...watch raindrops race on a window. All of it seems to be almost like a new workout routine, but mentally. It's hard. It take discipline now to just sit, and wait, or do something the long way.

            Aqua LetiferA 1 Reply Last reply
            • A AndyD

              @Doctor-Phibes said

              feels like the tech that was supposed to help us is slowly stifling all the joy.

              It started in the 80's and is still getting worse in every way. My recent solution is literally to laugh at the ineptitude of tech when it fails, and celebrate when real people efficiently solve things.

              So I need to dispose of 5 bags of asbestos (actually 1962 bathroom lino tiles, with brown, less than 1% in lining).
              "Easy" said the woman in the recycling centre, go online, you'll get an email with permission for tomorrow.
              Four days later in a loop of an old/new email, no working password and no way to rejoin, I call the council and after 1min20 of blah-blah get a "please say
              what you want"
              Hazardous waste" say I,
              Transferred to garden waste automatic payments (which I was told later wasn't actually working today)
              Hang up.

              Redial, wait 1.20, say "help help help", getting through to customer services.
              Person hears me laughing at my problem, tells me her woes that the system is going slow etc...
              then solves everything in 2 minutes.

              But tech can be really wonderful, freeing up our time so we can be creative

              Screenshot_20250129-062928_Facebook.jpg

              89th8 Offline
              89th8 Offline
              89th
              wrote on last edited by
              #16

              @AndyD said in Love the work, hate the job?:

              @Doctor-Phibes said

              feels like the tech that was supposed to help us is slowly stifling all the joy.

              It started in the 80's and is still getting worse in every way. My recent solution is literally to laugh at the ineptitude of tech when it fails

              Obviously I'm online, but there is a reason I never got a twitter or truth social or bluesky or linkedin or other accounts. I try (try...) to keep the "noise" to a minimum. I'm also a "rapid unsubscriber" from email lists, so I only get a few emails per day, which is nice. My tech routine is basically TNCR, CNBC, a very local news website (https://ccxmedia.org/). At night when the kids are in bed I open up my HOA's facebook thread (right now the only active discussion is someone replacing a light fixture they can't find a match for), and the top stories on reddit. It drives my wife nuts sometimes but I also don't reply to texts right away if I'm doing something... it's not a damn walky talky. It's a somewhat futile attempt at keeping things simple-ish.

              But tech can be really wonderful, freeing up our time so we can be creative

              Ha... tech can be great, too. Last night I threw on the VR goggles after everyone went to sleep and I was fixing the ISS in space with the earth below me. It was marvelous.

              HoraceH 1 Reply Last reply
              • Doctor PhibesD Online
                Doctor PhibesD Online
                Doctor Phibes
                wrote on last edited by
                #17

                The social aspects of tech are concerning, but there are good sides to that. Our phone bill is a lot lower than it was 25 years ago, and I get to see my family via video link.

                What I'm really complaining about is the fact that the great tech revolution has actually made things less efficient, at least for me. The job revolves around a bunch of software 'solutions', whose purpose seems to be other than to make my job easier.

                I was only joking

                1 Reply Last reply
                • 89th8 89th

                  @AndyD said in Love the work, hate the job?:

                  @Doctor-Phibes said

                  feels like the tech that was supposed to help us is slowly stifling all the joy.

                  It started in the 80's and is still getting worse in every way. My recent solution is literally to laugh at the ineptitude of tech when it fails

                  Obviously I'm online, but there is a reason I never got a twitter or truth social or bluesky or linkedin or other accounts. I try (try...) to keep the "noise" to a minimum. I'm also a "rapid unsubscriber" from email lists, so I only get a few emails per day, which is nice. My tech routine is basically TNCR, CNBC, a very local news website (https://ccxmedia.org/). At night when the kids are in bed I open up my HOA's facebook thread (right now the only active discussion is someone replacing a light fixture they can't find a match for), and the top stories on reddit. It drives my wife nuts sometimes but I also don't reply to texts right away if I'm doing something... it's not a damn walky talky. It's a somewhat futile attempt at keeping things simple-ish.

                  But tech can be really wonderful, freeing up our time so we can be creative

                  Ha... tech can be great, too. Last night I threw on the VR goggles after everyone went to sleep and I was fixing the ISS in space with the earth below me. It was marvelous.

                  HoraceH Offline
                  HoraceH Offline
                  Horace
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #18

                  @89th said in Love the work, hate the job?:

                  my HOA's facebook thread (right now the only active discussion is someone replacing a light fixture they can't find a match for)

                  Now that you've ensnared us in this drama, please keep us up to date.

                  Education is extremely important.

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  • 89th8 Offline
                    89th8 Offline
                    89th
                    wrote on last edited by 89th
                    #19

                    Well some lady accidentally broke a glass lampshade and asked if anyone had a spare. Luckily some guy just replaced his light fixtures so he had one... how lucky!

                    Today I'm actually replacing all of our recessed lights (cans with flood bulbs) throughout the house. I'm installing flat LED lights that provide the same lighting but less energy, heat, and replacements. Plus they look sleeker. As a result I'll have dozens of flood bulbs available I'll tell the facebook group about, and I'm sure they'll be gobbled up within an hour. Lots of "freecycling" in this neighborhood...toys, strollers, bikes, etc.

                    HoraceH 1 Reply Last reply
                    • 89th8 89th

                      Well some lady accidentally broke a glass lampshade and asked if anyone had a spare. Luckily some guy just replaced his light fixtures so he had one... how lucky!

                      Today I'm actually replacing all of our recessed lights (cans with flood bulbs) throughout the house. I'm installing flat LED lights that provide the same lighting but less energy, heat, and replacements. Plus they look sleeker. As a result I'll have dozens of flood bulbs available I'll tell the facebook group about, and I'm sure they'll be gobbled up within an hour. Lots of "freecycling" in this neighborhood...toys, strollers, bikes, etc.

                      HoraceH Offline
                      HoraceH Offline
                      Horace
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #20

                      @89th said in Love the work, hate the job?:

                      Well some lady accidentally broke a glass lampshade and asked if anyone had a spare. Luckily some guy just replaced his light fixtures so he had one... how lucky!

                      Today I'm actually replacing all of our recessed lights (cans with flood bulbs) throughout the house. I'm installing flat LED lights that provide the same lighting but less energy, heat, and replacements. Plus they look sleeker. As a result I'll have dozens of flood bulbs available I'll tell the facebook group about, and I'm sure they'll be gobbled up within an hour. Lots of "freecycling" in this neighborhood...toys, strollers, bikes, etc.

                      Thank you. Good luck with the light replacements. I dread doing to when it comes time. So far so good, two years in. I have some lights that are 20' up.

                      Education is extremely important.

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      • 89th8 Offline
                        89th8 Offline
                        89th
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #21

                        Your new house should have LEDs so hopefully you're good for a while. I do have a light bulb extension pole thing that I've only had to use once. It's pretty cool... would be more fun to attach a bulb to a drone and pull an Interstellar spinning docking thing.

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        • HoraceH Offline
                          HoraceH Offline
                          Horace
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #22

                          I have one of those too, and it'll reach, but I can only hope the suction is strong enough to unscrew the bulb that was put in by very strong illegal immigrant hands.

                          Education is extremely important.

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          • 89th8 Offline
                            89th8 Offline
                            89th
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #23

                            LOL. The tighter the bulb, the bigger the fear was of getting caught.

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            • 89th8 89th

                              @Aqua-Letifer said in Love the work, hate the job?:

                              @Doctor-Phibes said in Love the work, hate the job?:

                              Are all jobs like this now? It feels like the tech that was supposed to help us is slowly stifling all the joy.

                              First of all, sorry this is going on in your neck of the woods. It's tough to be in the middle; not at the start of a career, not right at the end. (But hey, I'm in the same boat, hooray!)

                              I had a decent job around 2008 or so. Then weird shit started happening. I had a meeting with my designer, and her desk was cleared out. A couple weeks later I had to speak to my marketing person and the same thing happened. Huh. Okay, well, I was thinking about getting a Master's anyway; suppose I might as well get on that. I helped my employers hire my replacement, who along with the rest of the company was laid off after a merger 4 months later.

                              Awhile later, I worked in a small town that was completely propped up by the industry I moved to work for. My co-workers started out their lives in the day care across the street that was run by the business. The sports teams and pretty much the leagues were funded by them, too.

                              Our office was on the third floor. One particular morning, I was taking the stairs—I always took the stairs, it had a far better view than the elevators—and there was no second floor. 150 people lost their jobs overnight. Today, the company no longer exists. Some of my former co-workers started making the 2.5-hour commute into the city where their new corporate overlords were located.

                              Every day in which I'm employed is a day in which I'm amazed. That being said, I'm neck deep with problems related to AI. But I use it frequently in a shitload of capacities. I know exactly what its capabilities are and are not. Not my job, or even my career, but the very concept of what I know how to do is under threat. Not really by the technology, but by what people ignorant of the technology think it's able to do. They honestly think a $15 a month subscription makes them gods. It's perverse.

                              This is just a natural progression of the path we've been on since I've been alive, maybe since ever. It's like what George Carlin said about cocaine. At first it's all pleasure with no pain; over time, it switches on you.

                              As an example, when the iPod first came out, it seemed extraordinary. “1,000 songs in my pocket? Hell yes, sign me up!” What the commercials didn’t say was that my friends and I would stop swapping albums like we did with tapes and CDs. That I would I stop going to music stores. That Spotify would go to work putting those stores out of business. That it would then start leveraging AI against musicians to put them out of business, too. That my friends would no longer see the point in seeing each other in person because we have Facebook now. That the rare times we do see each other, we don't go to shows anymore, and they're either on their phones or instead of telling me a funny story, act exasperated that I didn't see their reel made of said story.

                              In my opinion, in both our work and personal lives, technology has brought us to peak choice and convenience. We have too much of it now. We're addicted, but it's no longer doing us any favors.

                              Good post man. It's almost like the ability to unplug, or go analog, or just slow down and sit without looking at a screen...watch raindrops race on a window. All of it seems to be almost like a new workout routine, but mentally. It's hard. It take discipline now to just sit, and wait, or do something the long way.

                              Aqua LetiferA Offline
                              Aqua LetiferA Offline
                              Aqua Letifer
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #24

                              @89th said in Love the work, hate the job?:

                              Good post man. It's almost like the ability to unplug, or go analog, or just slow down and sit without looking at a screen...watch raindrops race on a window. All of it seems to be almost like a new workout routine, but mentally. It's hard. It take discipline now to just sit, and wait, or do something the long way.

                              Honestly, I do everything I can to stack the deck in my favor. I keep my phone plugged in at all times and when I'm in my car, I turn it off to make it a pain in the ass to use.

                              Please love yourself.

                              Doctor PhibesD 1 Reply Last reply
                              • 89th8 Offline
                                89th8 Offline
                                89th
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #25

                                Reminds me of a (light) argument I had with my wife a few years ago. I was going out for a run, she asked where my phone was? I said I don't take it. She asked but what if I get hurt? I said, I ran for years before cell phones were that common, I think it'll be ok.

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                • Aqua LetiferA Aqua Letifer

                                  @89th said in Love the work, hate the job?:

                                  Good post man. It's almost like the ability to unplug, or go analog, or just slow down and sit without looking at a screen...watch raindrops race on a window. All of it seems to be almost like a new workout routine, but mentally. It's hard. It take discipline now to just sit, and wait, or do something the long way.

                                  Honestly, I do everything I can to stack the deck in my favor. I keep my phone plugged in at all times and when I'm in my car, I turn it off to make it a pain in the ass to use.

                                  Doctor PhibesD Online
                                  Doctor PhibesD Online
                                  Doctor Phibes
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #26

                                  @Aqua-Letifer said in Love the work, hate the job?:

                                  I keep my phone plugged in at all times and when I'm in my car, I turn it off to make it a pain in the ass to use.

                                  Pretty much the only thing I like about my phone is the fact that I can listen to podcasts and music when I'm driving.

                                  I was only joking

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