132 points

Being emotionally detached from really stupid leadership decisions is harder than it seems

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110 points

The company doesn’t care about you. The company doesn’t care about you. The company doesn’t care about you.

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62 points

My uncle spent years preaching to me about the need to be loyal to a company. I never drank the Kool-Aid. He spent 21 years working for an investment banking company in their IT department. 4 years before he was set to retire with a full pension, etc. his company was acquired by a larger bank. He lost everything except his 401k. He then spent the next 12 years working to get his time back so he’d be able to retire. He died 2 years ago and the company sent a bouquet of flowers.

THE COMPANY DOESN’T CARE ABOUT YOU!!

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47 points

The company cares about you in the same way a beef farmer cares about his cattle.

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3 points

No, they don’t care that much

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41 points

Not even if you do valuable or efficent stuff for the company. You’re disposable.

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25 points

The company is always on the lookout for ways to replace you with somebody who will do more for less.

And in the meantime, they will squeeze you for every drop of effort they think they can get away with.

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Or less for less. I know a woman who is a manager of a dialysis clinic, as soon as she was making over 100k she started getting pushback from higher ups, having more oversight, and having her funds for extra services to patients / staff cut. It’s clear they want her out even though she has the lowest mortality in the region, because they don’t need more than beds filled (Medicaid pays) and legally required minimums to be met.

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13 points

also you might not be replaceable but your manager might be an idiot

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77 points

Your employer does not care about you. You are not important or irreplaceable

Take your time and energy and put it into your life, not their business

I have had coworkers die (not work related) and by the time you hear about it (like the next day) they have already worked out who will get the work done so the machine doesn’t have to stop

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38 points

I had a workmate develop a chronic illness after an infection of COVID, and he had to leave under hardship. People that hung out with him as best mates for years stopped talking to him in a matter of days.

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10 points

Did you? 🥺

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18 points

I sent him a few 3 message to see how he was doing. NGL we weren’t super tight before COVID, we never hung out outside of work, and people not masking around me really drove a wedge between us. I’m trying hard not to justify what happened, but who knows maybe I am a little bit.

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5 points

This depends. I’ve had easily 100 shit jobs where nobody cared. I’m now a software developer for a small business <10 employees and they do care.

I am aware I am living the dream now and this can’t be the case for most.

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59 points
*

HR protect the company first, the employees second.

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21 points

100%. The rebranding of some HR departments as “People Officers” or “People Team” drives me bonkers. When push comes to shove, they will always protect the interests of the business before the interests of the employee. Full stop.

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15 points

You are right, but to be fair. “Human Ressources” was an awful name to begin with.

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8 points

Yeah, neither is great. Needs to be called something like “Employee Business Relations” maybe?

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4 points

Hello fellow resource, uh i mean human.

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54 points

The longer you work anywhere – and I mean ANYWHERE – the more you see the bullshit and corruption and crappy rules or policies and inequality all over.
For me it has been about the 3 year mark anywhere I’ve worked: once you get past that, you fade away from “damn I’m glad to have a job and be making money!” and towards “this is absolute bulls#!t that [boss] did [thing] and hurt the workers in the process!” or similar

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3 points

Thanks, I agree!

Today businesses increase like mushrooms after rain, and decrease like mushrooms before summer.

Don’t get attached, move on to the next better mushroom 🍄

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2 points

3 years? What nirvana corp do you work at?

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1 point

Funny, that’s actually what motivated me at my last job. Things were fucked up, but not so fucked up that it was overwhelming. It was the Goldilocks zone of just fucked up enough that I think I can not only fix it, but look good if I do. It was a fun journey, all told, but there were definitely frustrations, even ones that lasted years.

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1 point

the Goldilocks zone of just fucked up enough

Hahaha, I love it

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