It's bullshit that service jobs 'look bad' on a resume. I'm doing waaay more work now than I ever did at a computer job.
It's bullshit that service jobs 'look bad' on a resume. I'm doing waaay more work now than I ever did at a computer job.
I used to have an incredibly easy WFH job that was easy as hell and paid an insane wage for where I live......now working one that's half the...
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The original was posted on /r/antiwork by /u/infieldmitt on 2024-11-17 23:14:15+00:00.
I used to have an incredibly easy WFH job that was easy as hell and paid an insane wage for where I live......now working one that's half the money; it's gig app dogshit - it's constant effort and genuinely challenging, driving all day. People treat you like a slave. [Once after finishing putting the groceries on a guy's front step, I said 'that's everything, thanks!' to a guy, and I could see in his eyes, briefly, a flash of 'why do i have to talk to this peon, yeah whatever thanks'] I wonder if it would be less physically exhausting if it were paid fairly; you wouldn't be so angry and tense and absorbing steps badly.
How do I not be pissed off constantly about this?