I’m curious to everyone’s thoughtful on how they plan on trying to retire. Also how old are you and what do you do? How much do you make? I’m so curious to see different answers from different income levels.
Author: Olivia
I love working for myself. I love making my own schedule. I love setting my own prices. I love working
Gotta love it.
Why can’t it be defined by daily tasks being accomplished, or the value of the work? If we get our work done early, why do we have to pretend to look busy for the rest of the day? Simple changes in the workplace can set off a butterfly effect of positive outcomes: lowered stress, less traffic on the roads because it essentially eliminates rush hour, less carbon footprint, lower overhead costs and resources, more time for life activities, more time with family, an overall positive outlook on life where work doesn’t consume everything. The c-suite assholes can still get their bonuses. In fact, you would think it drives motivation and productivity levels at work. This is true work flexibility, not the bullshit that companies advertise as a “benefit” on job postings. TLDR; jobs should be defined by quality of work, not quantity of hours like a robot. EDIT: I should…
Utopia Becomes Warmer.
I don't want to slave away for some meaningless job that doesn't give a shit about me, I'm currently in 11th grade and I don't want to live. I don't understand how I'm even supposed to be able to afford a house. If nothing changes in 5 years I'm killing myself. Just putting that out there
tldr: New job doesn't fit the discription or pay talked about during interview, afraid it will be a dead end, and don't know what to do. I just left a job in a field that I was very skilled in. It had a base pay of 15hr and then had commission on top of that. I used to make about 40k a year doing that, but recently switched to a new job. I've worked only a few so far, but initially the job posting was for a loan officer assistant position, and the pay range was anywhere from 50-150k. The job is located in a larger office building, and the interview went really well, and I was offered a job on the spot. I ended up accepting the job after being assured that I would make 15 and hour for the first 2-4 weeks and after the initial training I…