Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
Do You Or Have You Ever Been Able To Say That You Love Your Job?
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I hear people especially when being interviewed on TV saying that they loved their job. I have never been fortunate enough to have been in that position, a job for me has always been a means to an end, to put food on the table etc, bearable but not particularly enjoyable. Also when people say this, do they mean they never want to give up work because they enjoy it so much or do they mean that as far as work goes it's good but they will still retire as soon as they get the chance?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Loved, my job and still keep up with latest developments.
Happiest year of my life was the first year after qualification when I worked 100 hours a week with poor pay, but would have worked for no pay at all. Experience, feeling of being wanted, needed and appreciated was always there and what social life was needed was always available.
Strict rules, tough work schedules and responding to instructions without question made for a effective work ethic which has beeb slowly eroded over the decades.
Work always took priority over wife and children and I have never regretted that philosophy.
Work hard and rewards were at hand.
Postponed retirement and when it came........difficult to adjust.
Loved my job? It was my whole life and raison d'etre and it tears me apart to see it thrown to links and websites.
Happiest year of my life was the first year after qualification when I worked 100 hours a week with poor pay, but would have worked for no pay at all. Experience, feeling of being wanted, needed and appreciated was always there and what social life was needed was always available.
Strict rules, tough work schedules and responding to instructions without question made for a effective work ethic which has beeb slowly eroded over the decades.
Work always took priority over wife and children and I have never regretted that philosophy.
Work hard and rewards were at hand.
Postponed retirement and when it came........difficult to adjust.
Loved my job? It was my whole life and raison d'etre and it tears me apart to see it thrown to links and websites.
I can honestly say I enjoyed my job. Well I had loads of contracts, but doing basically the same thing. From start to finish installing pipework services in new build hospitals, Schools colleges. Chemical plants. Sea going maintenance all over the world on cruise and cargo ships. Middle of deserts supervising pipework installation on palaces and oil employee housing. Etc etc.
I spent the last 12 - 15 months of my army service as Regimental Photographer. A position which earned me a place on the Regimental Intelligence Section during our 3rd tour of Ulster in '76/'77, and i can honestly say, i absolutely loved it.
Another job i 'quite liked' was as a welder where, once we had reached our bonus ceiling of 120%, it was job done. We couldn't leave the factory, but we could sit in the canteen and play cards for the rest of the shift. Or, when the sun was out, hop up onto the roof and do a bit of sunbathing.
Another job i 'quite liked' was as a welder where, once we had reached our bonus ceiling of 120%, it was job done. We couldn't leave the factory, but we could sit in the canteen and play cards for the rest of the shift. Or, when the sun was out, hop up onto the roof and do a bit of sunbathing.
Forgot to add; i am currently a semi-retired painter and decorator, which, for the most part, i love doing. Come March i have a decision to make as to whether or not to retire completely. Of course, my decision may well be influenced by Covid, as many of my bookings have had to be postponed/cancelled through the virus. Which all means that during 2020, i was more 'retired' than 'semi-retired' :-)
Like sqad, my job was my life and I loved it. I had a complete work family who had been together for years, nearly all of whom loved it and believed in it as much as each other.
I knew that one day I would have to think about leaving and finding another life, and I'd just started to do that before the pandemic. Just as well because the whole industry was shattered; 90% of my colleagues were made redundant, hearts broken and people scattered to the wind.
Thankfully I was toward the end of my career and financially stable. I'm able to keep in touch with developments from the sidelines and have found a new restful life.
My question to you Dave50, is what job do you think you would enjoy if you could do anything at all?
I knew that one day I would have to think about leaving and finding another life, and I'd just started to do that before the pandemic. Just as well because the whole industry was shattered; 90% of my colleagues were made redundant, hearts broken and people scattered to the wind.
Thankfully I was toward the end of my career and financially stable. I'm able to keep in touch with developments from the sidelines and have found a new restful life.
My question to you Dave50, is what job do you think you would enjoy if you could do anything at all?
A chance remark at a party led to me working with deaf children and sometimes those with special needs. Our head was a bit of a maverick and a fantastic head teacher who brought out the best in his staff. That led to a happy and highly thought of school. I loved working there.
I had to resign when I had to give more time to caring for MrG and for my mother. I trained as a massage therapist so I could work at home.
I was amazed at how successful that became and how much I loved it. After many years I decided to stop working completely and indulge myself.
Loving both didn't mean I never wanted to give up working or that good though it was I'd still retire as soon as I had the chance. I was lucky enough to do what I loved for as long as I wanted and retire when I wanted to.
I had to resign when I had to give more time to caring for MrG and for my mother. I trained as a massage therapist so I could work at home.
I was amazed at how successful that became and how much I loved it. After many years I decided to stop working completely and indulge myself.
Loving both didn't mean I never wanted to give up working or that good though it was I'd still retire as soon as I had the chance. I was lucky enough to do what I loved for as long as I wanted and retire when I wanted to.
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