SNW s1e8 “The Elysian Kingdom”
“make it no.”
I’ll take “Things I want printed on my coffee mug” for $100, Alex.
Color changing, when full it says “make it so” when empty “make it no”
The reverse says “coffee, black”. Or maybe just a picture of the nebula
It would have been an implied “no” because I wouldn’t have even answered the phone.
This, definitely
MFW they don’t even bother asking anymore, having just made it “expected”:-|
This was me in previous jobs. I was on call 24/7 with no breaks for like 6 months. I was getting paged in the middle of the night 3 to 4 nights a week. It came closer to killing me. Subsequent jobs I have not allowed that. I may be lucky it’s worked out for me since.
Damn that’s horrible - yeah definitely take care of yourself, which I say in part bc we love seeing your content here, but for many other reasons as well! ☺️
Thank you. My current job is pretty chill now. I’ve also learned to better self advocate, which was learned too late in life
I still haven’t learned that balance yet, so kudos for your bravery to be willing to learn new things:-).
Apologies if you’ve heard this before:
Something useful to remind yourself is that if you fail to do something you agreed to do, that’s you failing.
If your boss can’t find someone to do something they need done outside of normal hours, that’s them failing.
Likewise if you tell them you can’t get something done because you’re only one person, it’s their responsibility to fix that, not your responsibility to bridge the gap. If it was truly so important to get done, they would have more hands to get it done. Otherwise they’re just blowing smoke and it can wait a day/weekend/week/until you actually have time.
Okay so I get that in theory but…
I recall a story of an American worker, of minority status if that helps (a black woman in the South), in a car assembly plant. She expressed sympathy to join a union, after which the suits “restructured job responsibilities”, which suddenly meant that she had to do a 2-person job… all alone. Did she succeed, or fail? I don’t know the outcome, but either way, she was set up to fail.
And I could see her agreeing to that. Being brought into the office, surrounded by suits, she was told that she could either lose her job outright, here and now, or agree to work by the new terms; at which point she will “fail” and lose it later.
I also recall an article somewhere that mentioned that a good manager is worth their weight in gold, and in particular more so than a good company climate. e.g. a company may offer “flex time”, but if your boss says that only whiny piss-babies would fail to show up prior to 6:00am, while those who are “success-minded” will be there sharp, prior to himself walking in the door (ignoring how older people legit have a tendency to wake up earlier in the day due to differences in their biological clocks, and how those without child responsibilities can make it to work easier without having to juggle the times that a school may open…), then “flex time” is revealed to be merely something on paper, without instantiation in reality under his guidance.
Though conversely, a boss who REALLY wants to keep someone, even if they have run out of PTO time and now find themselves sick yet AGAIN, will “find a way” to make something happen, despite how “company policy dictates that…”
So I don’t think it’s nearly as simple as all of that. Regardless of whose true “responsibility” something is, shit has a tendency to flow downhill. Though there are better places & worse places, and we all have the responsibility to find something that will work out for us, to the extent that we can make that happen - e.g. a black poor woman in the American South may have a more difficult time getting jobs elsewhere than a white upper middle or wealthy class cishet man with an ivy league education to point to (as e.g. George W. Bush did, despite his dad merely exchanging money in return for it, as the son himself failed his way through the actual learning process).
So, sometimes it’s “just smoke” yeah, but sometimes they back up the threat with firing someone too, to make way for someone who will kiss ass better than you were willing to.
Keep trying. Self advocating is important, but growing up, I (and probably you) were taught that loyalty to company, hard work, and blending in was ah that mattered and that you would be taken care of. That’s all BS, but it’s hard to break that thought process. It takes time, and confidence (which is also very hard).
Can someone explain how this works in the US? If my work said this to me I’d feel totally comfortable saying no, and if I did come in I’d charge for transport and get double time.
Well, in this particular instance, they asked on Wednesday to make up for time lost last week when I had to deal with a family emergency. So, I can understand that request. Otherwise, if a full-time employee is under by X hours, then they can usually get away with the request. Asking beyond that is overtime.
Fuck everything about that. A family emergency is an emergency. This is only within the ballpark of reasonable if you don’g have the time off to spend and need to have the hours in.
Fair. The particulars are more detailed than is safe to get into, but rest assured, family is safe/healthy and my investment in the company warrants my attention. I appreciate the concern for worker’s rights and mental well-being.
That episode is one of my favorite episodes of SNW ever.
Funny as hell… and then that emotional gut punch.
I pretty much work every weekend now as a freelancer, but they can’t have my Tuesday night D&D!