Originally posted by: Ornery
Good stuff. It disgusts me to hear all this whining about the widening gap between rich and poor, yet nobody wants to consider the sacrifices made to get ahead. Everyone I know with serious income has earned it, and is still earning it daily. You just don't get something for nothing!
True, but who's to say you have to work in the field of your degree? I personally work with computers, yet I'm a business major. The moral of the story is: Do what you love and what you're good at. If it pays well, that's just an added bonus. 😀Originally posted by: scorp00
Could of worked harder in college and been making that much while working 40-45 hrs a week. Some of us work hard in college while some have to do it for the rest of their lives because they chose a major that pays less, so they have to work more to make up the difference. 🙂
Originally posted by: radioouman
How do you have time for a girlfriend? Long distance relationship via cell phone?
You better believe it. I was lucky in that in my early 20's a great boss I had was able to impress upon me that I should look out for number one (me) and the company second.Talk about a reality check. Turns out the folks who took you on the corporate jet will shove you out on the street faster than you can recount missed autumn afternoons.
Well it's because Americans have a love for money. All those cars and pieces of stereo equipment take money and to make it you have to work. ML doesn't force people to work 90 hours/week. It's their own choice.I was like its a VACATION every day. Dumb Europeans barely work and they have a okay economy. While most people int he US bust their asses to get by every month. This is certainly unfair. And screw companies like Merryl Lynch for taking advantage of techie geeks and administrative employees and sucking the life out of them that early.
Originally posted by: Ornery
Good stuff. It disgusts me to hear all this whining about the widening gap between rich and poor, yet nobody wants to consider the sacrifices made to get ahead. Everyone I know with serious income has earned it, and is still earning it daily. You just don't get something for nothing!
Originally posted by: KGB
Its sad to read and usually hear that this is what is waiting for me after collge, like my university isn't a pain already. During high school I worked from 4-12 at a restaurant in NYC and it was a pain man, I worked too hard during my life to be expecting this.
Last year I had taken a trip to Europe, I was suprised when I saw shops, businesses, corporate building closing at 4 pm. I'm like WTH, I ask my uncle and he's like "It's normal like that here" I was like its a VACATION every day. Dumb Europeans barely work and they have a okay economy. While most people int he US bust their asses to get by every month. This is certainly unfair. And screw companies like Merryl Lynch for taking advantage of techie geeks and administrative employees and sucking the life out of them that early.
It's your choice to take the white collar route, rather than a trade or self employment. YOUR CHOICE!Originally posted by: KGB
Its sad to read and usually hear that this is what is waiting for me after collge, like my university isn't a pain already. During high school I worked from 4-12 at a restaurant in NYC and it was a pain man, I worked too hard during my life to be expecting this.
Go live in Europe then! The folks I know who moved here from different parts of Europe are sending money back home, not the other way around!Last year I had taken a trip to Europe, I was suprised when I saw shops, businesses, corporate building closing at 4 pm. I'm like WTH, I ask my uncle and he's like "It's normal like that here" I was like its a VACATION every day. Dumb Europeans barely work and they have a okay economy. While most people int he US bust their asses to get by every month. This is certainly unfair. And screw companies like Merryl Lynch for taking advantage of techie geeks and administrative employees and sucking the life out of them that early.
"...if you know you'll climb the corporate ladder to three-martini lunches soon. You sacrifice your 20s to the company, believing it will make you rich and powerful later."Originally posted by: FeathersMcGraw
Originally posted by: Ornery
Good stuff. It disgusts me to hear all this whining about the widening gap between rich and poor, yet nobody wants to consider the sacrifices made to get ahead. Everyone I know with serious income has earned it, and is still earning it daily. You just don't get something for nothing!
Funny, the points that I took away from the article were that:
a) those who are relentlessly working these ridiculously hard schedules are effectively being underpaid.
b) despite their efforts, when a need to preserve the shareholder bottom line surfaces, they're the first to get let go.
c) salary isn't a measure of happiness.
That these people are working hard for their wages is not in question. But if you're going to look at the wealth gap (and the $60K salaries cited in the article I would consider to be middle-class), are the executives who mandate 60+ hour schedules also following those schedules, and what is the effective hourly rate for those executives? Do those positions necessarily create a proportionate shareholder value?
I don't doubt that a lot of professionals are well-paid for their skills. I do not think this is the same as saying that everyone who's paid well earns it.
Originally posted by: Viper GTS
I work to live, not the other way around.
Precisely my thoughts.
My job is what allows me to live - It pays bills, it feeds me, gives me a place to sleep, etc. - It funds my life. My life, however, is the 123 hours a week I am not at work.
Viper GTS
Originally posted by: chizow
Yeah that article fails to mention that the partners/directors/execs of these firms work the same long hours if not more than their staff. Its reality. I've never been in a situation working past midnight trying to meet a client deadline where the partner was not right there in the thick of it with us. Its a corporate culture in places like this, and serves as an early weed-out measure which essentially makes you choose if you wish to continue doing it. You have to decide whether or not you think its worth it to be working these types of hours for the rest of your life.