I’ve just finished my first week at a new job. I like the job, but it’s the first time in several years that I’ve had relatively standard 8 hours a day, 5 days a week as my schedule. The last time I did was in 2019 or so, and then I went and got back into graduate school for the interim.
Now that I’m back to standard hours, the commitment of time and energy seems to be quite a lot, more than I remember from prior ft experience(It could well be that this job is actually mentally demanding, whereas my prior full-time job was pretty brainless) and I’m not sure how I will make room in my life for anything else.
I like the job I’m doing, and I don’t feel as if I’m being unreasonably pressured at work (Boss even said to go out of our way not to work overtime, and it’s a salaried position so I know they’re not trying to skimp on hourly pay), so I guess I’m mainly wanting to ask how the rest of you full-timers do it.
And does it get easier to manage as you start to get used to it and make a routine?
Maybe it feels like quite a basic or rudimentary to ask… But these are things I’ve forgotten in the interim since last working 40-hour weeks.
I’m 15 years in paper office space and already having a bad neck how can older gens stick to a same spot for so long.
For me, it was my hips. I really do think sitting for long periods in front of a computer is really bad for your health. Good luck to you. Get lots of exercise and take as many breaks as you can get away with.
You don’t have to do the same job the whole time?
No true I did change but in this business culture, especially family run there’s a core culture loyal to the company. Coming in as a job-hopper implies you’re a temp help. Even though everything is on friendly terms, the smoke break spot is the spot for gossip. :-D
The whole work from home drama during and after COVID regulations shown how many people actually dread the fulltime office space on a long term.
I still remember my first managers’ sons swimming lesson updates and skiing in the Alps slides like a trigger memory when I recognize the striped pastel blue blouse tucked in formal loose pants.
I was an engineer. I worked with four different companies, but the work was substantially the same, working in front of a computer.