PlasmaBomb
Lifer
- Nov 19, 2004
- 11,636
- 2
- 81
Not real actual working, but at work?
Feel free to include lunches and breaks
Far too long... what are lunches and breaks?
Not real actual working, but at work?
Feel free to include lunches and breaks
middle of the 28% tax bracket. i would rather work hard my 14 days and be able to afford to play hard on my 7 off.
It also depends if you really love what you're doing.
Otherwise I agree. I keep it to 40hrs.
Meh, the only jobs I could love enough to want to work more than 40 hours per week would be astronaut or pr0n star. Somehow I doubt that either of those is a career option for me.
50-60 during slow weeks, and 100+ when busy. though, 40-50% of my yearly income is based on the revenue i generate. and every 14 days I get 7 off.
lol...I must be doing it wrong too, iI could be working some dead end for half the pay and 40 hours a week.
meh. most people also do not get 17 weeks of off time per year either.
Meh, you're in a different situation because you get 1 week out of every 3 off and your compensation seems loosely tied to the amount of time you work. I assume you're in sales, right?
Meh, you're in a different situation because you get 1 week out of every 3 off and your compensation seems loosely tied to the amount of time you work. I assume you're in sales, right?
Me too. I can't imagine someone "loving" their normal office job so much that they're willing to work a significant amount of time for free (and yes, if you're salaried and working more than 40 hours, you're working for free). I actually laugh when people talk about their "careers." It is such a silly notion IMO.
I used to do it myself, and then I finally woke up. I may not be happy with my current job BUT I know that I will never "love" working in an office for someone else regardless and at least I only work 40 hours per week now.
Well, there is a lot to be said for that and it might be a tradeoff worth making. I really don't like work but if I had an opportunity like that, I'd probably jump at it and try it for awhile.
A friend of mine is president of a consulting firm and is wanting to hire me as a practice manager for a new practice he is forming. The compensation structure would be a base salary plus the more customers and work I bring onboard, the more money I'd make above this "OK" base salary. So, I'd be working many more hours at least initially to get things set up but there is no guarantee I'd make more than I do now. Do I want to trade off my cushy job for one where I could potentially make much more money but with many more hours? I haven't decided yet but sometimes I think this may be my last big chance and maybe I should sacrifice to make it happen.
First off, these sound contradicting.
They are contradicting, I know. I'm kind of at a mid-life crisis right now.