https://www.cnbc.com/2023/06/21/more-than-25percent-of-us-workers-are-now-covered-under-pay-transparency-laws.html
Category: Antiwork
Voting for the Best
When you work for a retirement home you can't afford to live in, and they want you to vote it Best Senior Living.
Let’s pray these successful men return to the surface and continue exploiting the working class.
Well where does the sub stand
What’s the subs stance vs Reddit. I figured given the makeup of the sun it’d shut down for a day or two but I don’t think it did or if it did it got buried (sorry was offline busy over the weekend, those gardens don’t garden themselves). So if the sun didn’t do anything when the rest of Reddit seems to be actively protesting does that mean we’re all talk and not active participants? I’m posting this more out of frustration with the endless loops of “why aren’t we mass protesting!!?!?” And then we do nothing when it costs nothing. Feel free to hate this view, more of just putting it out there for discussion.
Growing up I worked at fast food because I felt like maybe I should force myself to work there in order to remove anxiety and social awkwardness. I thought that social exposure will force me to speak up and interact with others but now I’m in my mid20s and I basically have zero job experience because I just never worked at a place more than 6 months. I’m freaking adult now, and I have a whole life ahead of me. If I just still live in this anxiety mindset and overthinking. How will I ever grow up. In life people get so ahead because of networking.
Being neurodivergent in the U.S. sucks.
T.W.: conditioning, over-medication, general assholery. I could write a multi-page essay about this shit, and probably will eventually, butnone of us have time for that now. So, I'll give you the condensed version of this rant. Living in the U.S. as a neurodivergent who's just joining the workforce is hell. From a young age, you're taught that unless you can be productive in this very specific way you aren't good for anything, so you dedicate your entire childhood to changing yourself in every way possible to fit that model. If you have ADHD like I do, you're put on medication that literally changes your brain to the point that you are no longer the person you were before. On top of that, in red states, when the medication stops working, they don't look for alternate ways to help, they just up the dosage. And then, when you hit the workforce…
Freelancing sucks
I am someone who has a side hustle. My main job is nice, but what I do in my free time is truly rewarding. Mostly. I have a client right now I'm designing wall art for, and I'm communicating with their marketing staff to get things finished. She's a nightmare client. Might be worse than what I deal with in my actual job. She has not provided any (much needed) resources or information, and takes 2 days MINIMUM to respond to my emails about my work. Now she's making me look incompetent to her colleague, despite the fact that the mistake is on her (approving a design that doesn't coincide with the branding). She's the laziest woman I know, and tries to be smart with me despite all the stuff I know about her and her laziness. I'm about to send a snarky email but I don't know how to…
How to adapt to office work?
So I have a new job working on an office/cubicle setting. Day 2 and I’m home with a massive headache. I want to love the job but staring at my computer all day drained me so hard. How have others adapted to doing office work like this? My old job was also at a computer all day but the whole office was empty, less busy , and I only had one monitor. I may be letting my anxiety get the better of me tbh.
I don't think I'm a bad employee. I started working at 18 in nightclub environments, until finding a more hour friendly job at a well known fast food chain whilst at university. I stayed there for a few years after my degree, i suppose initially enjoying being able to play with a store in sandbox mode and commit to it. but eventually it wore me down, and i left I was unemployed for 3 months after this. I didn't leave the job because I had something lined up, i was just done. And I got lucky enough it was close enough to my graduation I could pitch myself as a “new grad” Now, 4 years later, at 27, I find myself at this point again at my new job. I could write paragraphs on how awful my boss is. But personally, I don't like to look for things while employed,…
A while ago, my job (without notice) cut my shifts from 48 hours/6 days a week to one or two days a week, with only 4 hour shifts. This particular week, I was scheduled to work on Tuesday and Wednesday, and I had a concert on Tuesday. I notified my boss of that concert 3 days ahead of time (company policy requires only 24 hours notice), received no response, and I was suddenly only scheduled for that Tuesday. I texted my boss multiple times up until the actual shift came up, and I didn't hear anything. So, considering I was within company policy, I didn't show up. And since then, I haven't gotten a single hour assigned to me. Everyone at that work has completely ghosted me, for doing nothing wrong. What can I do to make this right for me? My lack of a job has messed my financial…