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I worked for my dad from when I was 12. I got a job in a store while in college (and kept working for my dad). I got a job in accounting when I graduated. Boss decided to retire dad and I bought him out â so I was working for my dad again . Dad died â I have been working for myself for close to 30 years. Have a second job â husband and I have a craft business together.
Mostly have not have not had goof off jobs.
(And when I sold Jewelry at a large, local home goods store when in college someone actually once offered me a tip and I turned it down. Same happened to husband while he was working while in college in a department storeâs âbasement shoesâ â he also turned it down.)
âQuiet Quittingâ is a new name for an old ideaâ âwork to wageâ. Basically, Iâll do what you pay me to do, Iâll do it well, but thatâs it. No voluntary unpaid overtime, no covering two jobs âjust until we hire someoneâ, no taking on your managerâs tasks in an attempt to impress them. An hourâs work for an hourâs pay, period. Taking on extra work hasnât led to anything but more work in decades, and people are finally realizing thatâs not going to change. The term âquiet quittingâ was invented by higher-ups who are freaking out at the idea of having to fully staff their businesses instead of bilking their employees out of more work than theyâre paying for.
We millennials were brought up to believe that going above and beyond expectations in the workplace would reap rewards both financially and in character. We found out the hard way that that was a crock from those who wanted to take advantage of us, especially when many of us lost jobs and careers to two major recessions before we turned forty.
Out of college I thought Iâd be working the rest of my life for the first company that hired me. Seems silly now to have thought that way, but I donât think I was alone. With a generation coming in that has spent way to many hours playing video games, Iâm not surprised at their having a different mind set. We will have to see where this new attitude leads us.
what a sad world you all lived in. Every company i ever worked for paid me my due. Even when I took night school courses to better learn the trade the bosses found out and not only paid me more but reimbursed me for my courses well after the fact. the only time i worked to rule as it were, was my time in the military. Now Iâve been fired from a few jobs and quit many more to take a step up the ladder but I was never taken advantage of.
I didnât quiet quit. After being told we needed to work Sunday, after already working 10 hour shift m-f and 8 Saturday (normal work week) I yelled to my manager across the room âI quitâ. I was already planning on quiting and doing it quietly, but the Sunday thing got me mad. Retired 2 weeks later. BTW we didnât have to work Sunday after this.
I canât relate at all. When I found how much I loved troubleshooting electronics (age 14) it translated into my first job at age 17. I could hardly believe I was being paid â only $3 per hour, but in 1970 that was enough â for making things that didnât work, work.
Fast forward 20 years and a change of career: now doing field fixes on things in gorgeous natural settings. A lot of people dreaded the call in the night, but I lived for it⊠God help me, a lost sinner! Snow cats are nobodyâs favorite, but the adventure is like hot peppers on a pizza. I never gave less than my best because although my employers were paying me well enough I was doing it for me until my drive and body gave out. My last high profile assignment was a gift to me: developing a preventive maintenance system for the department. I had three months and beat the deadline by two weeks, and it was absolute heaven to me. My legacy would be ongoing prevention of failures in the entire department with a system that would stand up to regulatory scrutiny. When the Director tasked our department with it my boss said, âI have just the man for it.â Six months after I rolled it out to much acclaim I turned in my papers. I went out on a higher note than I ever had imagined.
Retirement was not about money to me; it was saying good bye to the first love of my life to spend more time with my second love. Life is very, very good.
I worked as hard as my employer paid me to work. My first mechanic jib paid $6 per hour as an apprentice. My last mechanic job paid $22 per hour. Adjusted for inflation I never got a raise. Mechanics supply their own tools in most cases, in my case over $45,000. Everything went up way faster than pay. When my manager gave me crap about doing something extra Iâd ask him if he had to supply his own desk or pencils.
Iâm in several menâs groups with mostly retirees from various jobs and walks of life. Almost every guy never discusses his past work life. I imagine if working was so great, guys would discuss it more. OTOH, the veterans seem to cling to memories of their time in service, but I canât relate to that, luckily having had a high draft number.
When I started working at the university we were all keen and willing to give 110%. Then we went for reclassification and management decided our jobs werenât very important, and didnât want to pay us what we were worth. Folks did a lot of quiet quitting after we heard thatâŠ
Um, no. This boomer knows that âquiet quittingâ is a phrase coined to make workers looks lazy. The proper term is âworking to ruleâ (or âworking to the ruleâ), and what workers are doing now are working their assigned hours (instead of working off the clock), and turning off their business phones and email after hours. In other words, workers are setting appropriate boundaries and Big Business doesnât like that. When I hear âquiet quittingâ, I hear âanti-worker, anti-unionâ.
I worked alongside a woman that would leave her station to go visit friends, while I stayed and worked continuously. At the end of the day when the supervisor asked for the number of units completed, I would tell him my number, then somehow, she would have done 2 or 3 more than me. (We didnât have the serial number tracking system at that time.) I also worked with a disabled guy who only had one arm. The other arm was always holding his cell phone all through the shift.
alasko over 2 years ago
Slackers.
syzygy47 over 2 years ago
Fine. Do that. I hate the expectation of tipping culture anyway. The phony airs of concern isnât even a part of it at all nowadays.
mafastore over 2 years ago
I worked for my dad from when I was 12. I got a job in a store while in college (and kept working for my dad). I got a job in accounting when I graduated. Boss decided to retire dad and I bought him out â so I was working for my dad again . Dad died â I have been working for myself for close to 30 years. Have a second job â husband and I have a craft business together.
Mostly have not have not had goof off jobs.
(And when I sold Jewelry at a large, local home goods store when in college someone actually once offered me a tip and I turned it down. Same happened to husband while he was working while in college in a department storeâs âbasement shoesâ â he also turned it down.)
mischugenah over 2 years ago
âQuiet Quittingâ is a new name for an old ideaâ âwork to wageâ. Basically, Iâll do what you pay me to do, Iâll do it well, but thatâs it. No voluntary unpaid overtime, no covering two jobs âjust until we hire someoneâ, no taking on your managerâs tasks in an attempt to impress them. An hourâs work for an hourâs pay, period. Taking on extra work hasnât led to anything but more work in decades, and people are finally realizing thatâs not going to change. The term âquiet quittingâ was invented by higher-ups who are freaking out at the idea of having to fully staff their businesses instead of bilking their employees out of more work than theyâre paying for.
Its just me over 2 years ago
Always organized work that I enjoyed and so enjoyed working.
Chalres over 2 years ago
â« âSeems that I was busy doing something close to nothingâ â«
mysterysciencefreezer over 2 years ago
I love how every time someone takes a look at âquiet quittingâ, the immediate reaction is ALWAYS âHow is this new?â
WaitingMan over 2 years ago
Quiet quitting humor:
Knock knock.
Whoâs there?
Armageddon.
Armageddon who?
Armageddon out of here!
Say What? Premium Member over 2 years ago
We millennials were brought up to believe that going above and beyond expectations in the workplace would reap rewards both financially and in character. We found out the hard way that that was a crock from those who wanted to take advantage of us, especially when many of us lost jobs and careers to two major recessions before we turned forty.
Chris over 2 years ago
really, what a doop.
shorzy over 2 years ago
Wage slavery has been discoveredâŠ
John Leonard Premium Member over 2 years ago
âQuiet quittingâ is just bizspeak for workers not giving their labor away and only doing what theyâre paid to do.
NeedaChuckle Premium Member over 2 years ago
My boss would give me my review and I was adequate. Now there is no way I was going to make my boss a LIAR! So I was adequate!
some idiot from R'lyeh Premium Member over 2 years ago
Funny how âdoing the job youâre paid to doâ gets positioned as a new, questionable thing.
Egrayjames over 2 years ago
Out of college I thought Iâd be working the rest of my life for the first company that hired me. Seems silly now to have thought that way, but I donât think I was alone. With a generation coming in that has spent way to many hours playing video games, Iâm not surprised at their having a different mind set. We will have to see where this new attitude leads us.
Ignatz Premium Member over 2 years ago
Your boss wonât pay you any more than he absolutely has to. Why should you do any more work than you absolutely have to?
Clotty Peristalt over 2 years ago
And many of those slackers are on their phones all day too, arenât they Janis?
MuddyUSA Premium Member over 2 years ago
TikTok a Chinese subtle destroyer!
formathe over 2 years ago
what a sad world you all lived in. Every company i ever worked for paid me my due. Even when I took night school courses to better learn the trade the bosses found out and not only paid me more but reimbursed me for my courses well after the fact. the only time i worked to rule as it were, was my time in the military. Now Iâve been fired from a few jobs and quit many more to take a step up the ladder but I was never taken advantage of.
wolfgang73 over 2 years ago
Exactly.
squireobrien over 2 years ago
Boomers: Why arenât young people putting in extra effort for the money?
Mils: Why wonât owners pay enough to live on for work?
petermerck over 2 years ago
I didnât quiet quit. After being told we needed to work Sunday, after already working 10 hour shift m-f and 8 Saturday (normal work week) I yelled to my manager across the room âI quitâ. I was already planning on quiting and doing it quietly, but the Sunday thing got me mad. Retired 2 weeks later. BTW we didnât have to work Sunday after this.
flagmichael Premium Member over 2 years ago
I canât relate at all. When I found how much I loved troubleshooting electronics (age 14) it translated into my first job at age 17. I could hardly believe I was being paid â only $3 per hour, but in 1970 that was enough â for making things that didnât work, work.
Fast forward 20 years and a change of career: now doing field fixes on things in gorgeous natural settings. A lot of people dreaded the call in the night, but I lived for it⊠God help me, a lost sinner! Snow cats are nobodyâs favorite, but the adventure is like hot peppers on a pizza. I never gave less than my best because although my employers were paying me well enough I was doing it for me until my drive and body gave out. My last high profile assignment was a gift to me: developing a preventive maintenance system for the department. I had three months and beat the deadline by two weeks, and it was absolute heaven to me. My legacy would be ongoing prevention of failures in the entire department with a system that would stand up to regulatory scrutiny. When the Director tasked our department with it my boss said, âI have just the man for it.â Six months after I rolled it out to much acclaim I turned in my papers. I went out on a higher note than I ever had imagined.
Retirement was not about money to me; it was saying good bye to the first love of my life to spend more time with my second love. Life is very, very good.
SofaKing Premium Member over 2 years ago
I worked as hard as my employer paid me to work. My first mechanic jib paid $6 per hour as an apprentice. My last mechanic job paid $22 per hour. Adjusted for inflation I never got a raise. Mechanics supply their own tools in most cases, in my case over $45,000. Everything went up way faster than pay. When my manager gave me crap about doing something extra Iâd ask him if he had to supply his own desk or pencils.
Beetle Premium Member over 2 years ago
The term where I work is âretiring in placeâ.
David Huie Green LikeNobody'sEverSeen over 2 years ago
I always do my best. âTainât much but itâs all I got.
walstib Premium Member over 2 years ago
Iâm in several menâs groups with mostly retirees from various jobs and walks of life. Almost every guy never discusses his past work life. I imagine if working was so great, guys would discuss it more. OTOH, the veterans seem to cling to memories of their time in service, but I canât relate to that, luckily having had a high draft number.
mourdac Premium Member over 2 years ago
Alert to the media: there have always been folk who did the bare minimum to keep their jobs, it ainât a new concept.
lawguy05 over 2 years ago
People should have more pride in their work.
Night-Gaunt49[Bozo is Boffo] over 2 years ago
I never do that I worked like I was getting paid very well even when I wasnât.
The Orange Mailman over 2 years ago
Thank you all for your perspective.
JP Steve Premium Member over 2 years ago
When I started working at the university we were all keen and willing to give 110%. Then we went for reclassification and management decided our jobs werenât very important, and didnât want to pay us what we were worth. Folks did a lot of quiet quitting after we heard thatâŠ
bozo56 over 2 years ago
Um, no. This boomer knows that âquiet quittingâ is a phrase coined to make workers looks lazy. The proper term is âworking to ruleâ (or âworking to the ruleâ), and what workers are doing now are working their assigned hours (instead of working off the clock), and turning off their business phones and email after hours. In other words, workers are setting appropriate boundaries and Big Business doesnât like that. When I hear âquiet quittingâ, I hear âanti-worker, anti-unionâ.
Teto85 Premium Member over 2 years ago
Itâs not a new thing.
lindz.coop Premium Member over 2 years ago
I lost a sweet, beautiful cat to a vet who was just âquietly quittingâ a month ago.
Willameano Premium Member over 2 years ago
I worked alongside a woman that would leave her station to go visit friends, while I stayed and worked continuously. At the end of the day when the supervisor asked for the number of units completed, I would tell him my number, then somehow, she would have done 2 or 3 more than me. (We didnât have the serial number tracking system at that time.) I also worked with a disabled guy who only had one arm. The other arm was always holding his cell phone all through the shift.
PurpleOpus over 2 years ago
Hope TIAA misses me. Gave them my all for 15 years and they threw me away over a toxic vaccine.