timthumbni wrote: » I understand the need for money to live etc but do we really need to work Monday to Friday, 9 to 5 etc?
timthumbni wrote: » Does anyone else think that working is one of the biggest cons ever pulled? Working 5/6 days a week in the year 2017 seems absurd to me. Also the fact that those on welfare seem to be better or as well off than those of us who actually are working makes no sense at all. We are here for a short time. I understand the need for money to live etc but do we really need to work Monday to Friday, 9 to 5 etc?
munster87 wrote: » Sure what else would you be doing?
Solomon Pleasant wrote: » I'm a college student but this is something that has really been bothering me over the last year or so. When I graduate it'll probably be in some kind of office job (if I get a job) where I'll probably be working for some manager who I quite dislike but I'll probably become similar to over the next 40 years. Anyway, work your life away while the founder becomes rich and you earn a wage which is sufficient for survival but not really sufficient for growth and self actualisation. Perhaps this is just me being slightly anti capitalist as it seems to be the done thing. I view it as working your life away and I would imagine it could become my greatest regret. I'm still in college though, studying to gain one of these jobs so I do feel very hypocritical at times. Entrepreneurship is honestly the only viable solution that I can see as I don't see a life on social welfare as particularly fulfilling either.
Ulysses Gaze wrote: » Living
wally1990 wrote: » http://extra.ie/news/irish-news/family-of-ten-were-on-too-much-welfare-to-get-a-home A couple whose sole income from welfare payments totals €48,000 have taken a court case over getting pushed off the waiting list for a council house after having their eighth child
snowflaker wrote: » Working or not working? Working gives you a sense of achievement and worth and a reason to get up each day. Not having a job tears away at you.
Solomon Pleasant wrote: » I'm a college student but this is something that has really been bothering me over the last year or so. When I graduate it'll probably be in some kind of office job (if I get a job) where I'll probably be working for some manager who I quite dislike but I'll probably become similar to over the next 40 years. Anyway, work your life away while the founder becomes rich and you earn a wage which is sufficient for survival but not really sufficient for growth and self actualisation. Perhaps this is just me being slightly anti capitalist as it seems to be the done thing. I view it as working your life away and I would imagine it could become my greatest regret. I'm still in college though, studying to gain one of these jobs so I do feel very hypocritical at times.Entrepreneurship is honestly the only viable solution that I can see as I don't see a life on social welfare as particularly fulfilling either.
Solomon Pleasant wrote: » When I graduate it'll probably be in some kind of office job (if I get a job) where I'll probably be working for some manager who I quite dislike but I'll probably become similar to over the next 40 years. Anyway, work your life away while the founder becomes rich and you earn a wage which is sufficient for survival but not really sufficient for growth and self actualisation
SwD wrote: » It sounds like you definitely made some bad choices on the old CAO.
Ulysses Gaze wrote: » 80% of Irish people are disengaged with their work. They are only there for the cash.
Solomon Pleasant wrote: » Honestly, I do enjoy my course and I worked extremely hard to get into it. I get to study a foreign language as part of it which i find very interesting and stimulating, but the whole concept of going into an office for 5 days a week for the rest of my life seems like borderline madness. It's probably a little but idealist of me to think otherwise but I would like to imagine that there is a way to live without conforming to the "work until you die" approach.
messy tessy wrote: » So young and so bitter!
SwD wrote: » As my grandmother used to say: Do what you love and you'll never work a day in your life. Find a job that gives you purpose.
SwD wrote: » As my grandmother used to say:Do what you love and you'll never work a day in your life. Find a job that gives you purpose.
D Trent wrote: » Not necessarilyhttp://m.imdb.com/title/tt0758758/