• rem26_art@fedia.io
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    9 days ago

    treating the IRL daycare like the daycare in Pokemon. If you come back to the daycare years later, you’ll have a lvl 100 kid

  • cabillaud@sh.itjust.works
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    9 days ago

    1h lunch, that’s a lot of time wasted that could have been used for conducting interviews. smh, ppl nowadays don’t really know the meaning of commitment.

  • pixxelkick@lemmy.world
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    9 days ago

    I mean for what its worth, if the dude has a partner they couldve just picked the kid up, its not exactly unheard of for one partner to do drop off and the other do pick up… kind of a lukewarm take here.

    • merc@sh.itjust.works
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      9 days ago

      And the partner did minor things like:

      • get his son dressed and feed him breakfast
      • give the dog its morning walk
      • go to work
      • come home from work
      • pick his son up from daycare
      • give the dog its afternoon / evening walk, bringing the toddler along to spend some quality time in the park
      • make and serve dinner for him / herself and the son
      • give the son a bath and get him ready for bed
      • read the son a bedtime story

      But, I’m sure that everything there other than work would have taken what, 1-2 hours at most? Minor things.

  • Nangijala@feddit.dk
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    8 days ago

    I have seen a few examples of people using linkedin to humble brag about their work ethic or whatever and all it ever does is tell me that they aren’t actually happy with the thing they do.

    I find it a lot more interesting to read or hear stories about projects people have been working on and them telling a little bit about the process. The excitement of them sharing what they have worked on is ten times more interesting than some randy bragging about how much they worked in one day.

    Like omg congratulations. I work along hours too. I don’t think it’s anything to be proud of. Quite the contrary.

    • paul@lemmy.org
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      8 days ago

      People like that are in a constant battle to prove how exceptional they are while being completely unexceptional. They have no real success stories so they have to create some by painting this image in their heads that they are naturally superior to everyone else. Every one of them have Dunning-Kreuger syndrome.

      • Nangijala@feddit.dk
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        7 days ago

        You’re probably right, but that is so sad, omg xD

        All I can say is that working long hours is soul crushing. I went through an extreme case of that a few years ago, out of necessity.

        Worked so much I have like three months from that year that are almost totally blank in my memory. No clue what happened during that time.

        According to my boyfriend, at my worst, I worked between 90 and 120 hours a week.

        All I know is that I didn’t have a social life and didn’t have hobbies or any free time. Didn’t even have time to breath and have a check in with myself so I didn’t know that I was on the brink of losing it before I almost did.

        Still paying the mental and physical price for that sacrifice two years later and it wasn’t fucking worth it, man. Like at all.

        I’ve had to relearn what it means to have freetime and hobbies. It’s going okay in that department! Have gotten my plant hobby back on track and am currently making fugly fridge magnets with stupid faces and googly eyes. Figured I needed something funny to look at when I’m not around a mirror.

        We also went to the beach today and collected sea glass, which is basically like meditation, if you ask me!