EUGENE, OR—Arriving back at work after a two-week winter vacation, local marketing assistant Matthew Bueso told reporters Monday he was happy to return to the office with a fresh and rejuvenated loathing for his job. “It’s always nice to get away for a few weeks, clear my head, and come back invigor...
i'm so grateful that i don't dread going to work. i've had those jobs before and if there's only one thing i can proclaim to be 100% true, it's that no matter what any job is giving you, it's not worth sacrificing your mental health
I am convinced that I'm just hardwired to dread going to work. Doesn't matter how good the job is.
Unless it's something I really enjoy doing. But if I'm doing something that I enjoy doing, for work, then it will ruin that thing for me. So it's only a matter of time in that case.
Yep. Before I started with my current company, I was in a temp gig at the most soul-suckingly depressing office I have ever been to. I kept telling myself "this is how corporate life is. Shove those feelings of despair down, and try to make a career." Thank sweet as zombie Jesus that I found my current employer.
It wasn't in the headline, but the satirical part of the article was the notion that he had (at least) two weeks' worth of PTO and was allowed to use it all at once.
Yeah this is me in about 10 days. Almost a month vacation to explore Sweden and the Baltic states. Going to get back to work and have like 5 months before I attempt to move to Sweden. I'm dreading being back at work for that time I really hope I can pull through and save up enough for the move while being burnt out
Keeping in mind I've only visited 1-2 towns from each place
Sweden, Stockholm and Visby: The language is gorgeous sounding I like listening to people talk. I like how everyone walks in the street. People are very nice. I had a sense of belonging like I had already been living there so that's a good sign for moving.
Estonia, Tallinn: Holy shit I got to walk on a real castle wall. There's a meshing of modern and medieval architecture that works stunningly it's so amazing. Rich history everywhere.
Latvia, Riga: Grafitti game is on point. The art nouveau is incredible but I preferred the castles tbh. There is a very palpable tension between Latvian and Russian that put me on edge. Like if I said thank you in Latvian some people would get upset at me, but if I said thank you in Russian other people would correct me "this is LATVIA". I bring this up as a favorite because it reminds me that visiting for a few days doesn't mean I understand the area.
Netherlands, Amsterdam and The Hague: To get off the plane and out of Amsterdam skipping it entirely was super easy. New Years in The Hague was unreal like nothing I've ever seen. Indonesian food is very good here too. Everyone here bikes, transit flows well, the trolleys are fun to watch. I question how many people fall into the river that has almost no guardrails anywhere.
Sweden again, soon I'm flying north to play in the snow and work my way back to Stockholm. No reports yet but I love cold and snow so I suspect I'll be happy there too.
I'm going to try and swing getting there on a student visa. I need to save enough to pay for housing and tuition, I'm guessing about $30k should get me there if I also find a part time job while at school. My Swedish is incredibly basic so far but I'm getting decent at reading. A lot of it is close enough to English I can kinda get the gist of text within known contexts. Listening to it though is still well beyond me, it sounds like actual elvish it's wild to me. I want to learn it so much though I want to be able to speak such a pretty language
Not me, not this year. I even told a coworker earlier that going back to work today is basically a mini vacation from life. I'm getting paid to be distracted from everything else that's going on around me, and I get to ignore it all for 8 - 10 hours, emergencies aside.