A day for job bitching
Feb. 7th, 2003 03:57 pmReally. It is.
I'm so sick of everything. I arrived at work at 7:45 this morning (15 minutes early). No one else arrived until 9 or later. Now it's 4:50 and everyone is leaving... but *I* have to stay here another fucking hour.
Dammit.
I'm sick, sick, sick of this. Why is it that *I* have to work a 9 hour day and no one else does? And yes, I take a lunch break (*gasp!*), but everyone else has no limit on breaks and so takes a much longer one. Growl, growl, growl.
I need to quit. Really, I do.
I'm so sick of everything. I arrived at work at 7:45 this morning (15 minutes early). No one else arrived until 9 or later. Now it's 4:50 and everyone is leaving... but *I* have to stay here another fucking hour.
Dammit.
I'm sick, sick, sick of this. Why is it that *I* have to work a 9 hour day and no one else does? And yes, I take a lunch break (*gasp!*), but everyone else has no limit on breaks and so takes a much longer one. Growl, growl, growl.
I need to quit. Really, I do.
Hrm...
Date: 2003-02-07 04:33 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2003-02-07 04:43 pm (UTC)An easy answer might be to do the same as our boss... but I can't. Forgetting the worries about being fired (ironic, since I want to quit), I have a hard time cutting corners and slacking off and stuff...
no subject
Date: 2003-02-07 07:13 pm (UTC)However, what _is_ a problem is that you're putting in a lot of free work that nobody else cares about. You're not getting told that you're doing a good job, and being properly appreciated. That's no good. It means that this company isn't a good fit for your work ethic.
(A lot of these questions aren't, IMO, about a right or wrong way to approach things, so much as finding a company that encourages your approach.)
The economy is rough, but it's well worth some effort spent trying to find someone who _will_ appreciate their employees caring about their job, and what's more, expect your co-workers to do the same thing. So that, after 9 hours, if you're still not caught up, at least you can expect the guy next to you to still be working too. And, I suspect, that's all you really need.
It's not like they'll stop you from taking a long lunch for an interview, or even a personal day. And sometimes, there's nothing that bring appreciation more than showing up in nicer than normal clothes and taking a 2 hour lunch. (I've heard of people doing this from time to time without an actual interview lined up, just for the reaction.)
Hotjobs and Yahoo have merged (into, I think, hotjobs.yahoo.com), and that and Monster.com are probably the logical places to post your resume and do a few searches.
Good luck!
no subject
Date: 2003-02-10 08:24 am (UTC)You don't *have* to work a 9 hour day anymore than they are. What's keeping you there, coming in early and staying until "you're supposed to" is your own sense of ethics.
I agree with batratblue. If it is a problem, and I think it is, take it to HR. But, if you do that, I'd sit down and keep track of their arrival and departure times for 2-3 weeks so you can take this information with you. They want concretes, when they take complaints like that.