The Compelling Case For Working Less (bbc.com)
An anonymous reader shares a report from the BBC, written by Amanda Ruggeri: As we fill our days with more and more "doing," many of us are finding that non-stop activity isn't the apotheosis of productivity. It is its adversary. Researchers are learning that it doesn't just mean that the work we produce at the end of a 14-hour day is of worse quality than when we're fresh. This pattern of working also undermines our creativity and our cognition. Over time, it can make us feel physically sick -- and even, ironically, as if we have no purpose. Think of mental work as doing push-ups, says Josh Davis, author of Two Awesome Hours. Say you want to do 10,000. The most 'efficient' way would be to do them all at once without a break. We know instinctively, though, that that is impossible. Instead, if we did just a few at a time, between other activities and stretched out over weeks, hitting 10,000 would become far more feasible. "The brain is very much like a muscle in this respect," Davis writes. "Set up the wrong conditions through constant work and we can accomplish little. Set up the right conditions and there is probably little we can't do." Many of us, though, tend to think of our brains not as muscles, but as a computer: a machine capable of constant work. Not only is that untrue, but pushing ourselves to work for hours without a break can be harmful, some experts say. Ruggeri goes on to highlight the negative health effects associated with working long hours. "One meta-analysis found that long working hours increased the risk of coronary heart disease by 40% -- almost as much as smoking (50%)," she writes. "Another found that people who worked long hours had a significantly higher risk of stroke, while people who worked more than 11 hours a day were almost 2.5 times more likely to have a major depressive episode than those who worked seven to eight."
Until you get fired and replaced by an immigrant who works more for less.
...Europe is falling far behind the United States in productivity and wealth.
From working cash in hand jobs as a teen to a couple of decades later, the less I work the more I earn.
I was always led to believe the inverse is true.
A 'singular oddity' is an event that cannot be explained and only happens when you are alone.
We're productive enough as a society that we could probably get by on a 20 hour work week.
So what happens then? Well, it's obviously fairly sustainable to work 40 hours per week... so someone's going to get two jobs with opposing schedules so they can have a nicer house.
When they do that, someone else won't have a job opportunity and they'll lower their income expectations. The economy will slowly adjust to the practical reality that people will work 40 hours a week for a standard wage, and then 20 hours won't be enough for food and shelter any longer and everyone will have to have two jobs instead of one.
Then you're right back to where we are now.
You won't get more than 6 hours of productive work from a knowledge worker. They can be there for longer, but they could do their shit faster and head home, and there would be no difference in output.
14-hour day should be X2 OT or more and that immigrant needs to be pay at least $90-$110K.
...should an immigrant have to pay to work?
As long as the goverrnment finds virtue in people working 40 hours a week and incititing it by knowingly inflating away their earnings and taxing the rest people will continue to be on the long hamster wheel.
You gave hand jobs for money? SICK!!!!
There is an old saying in the IT field "the dream of every IT admin, is to have everything running so smoothly, that you don't have to do anything. The curse is, that dream comes true."
Our place runs so well (locked down users help a great deal) that we spend weeks doing very little. It can be a curse as we are often bored senseless and wish for more work.
I know this is in the minority, but our place is unusual in that we are restricted from being proactive, so we cannot spend the spare time looking forward, only waiting for something to happen.
Yet we are the highest paid people in the building. Go figure...
It means they have to be paid more. But as automation and outsourcing devalues their labor they're going to be worth less. That's just supply and demand. So of they're going to work less the people who pay them are going to have to be forced to pay them more, probably with an underlying threat (e.g. of you don't pay your taxes you go to jail). Now, I'm a socialist so I'm fine with that, but how about the rest out there? Forget logic and reason, how does it make you feel?
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17 years ago, I had a one year contract with unlimited overtime, all meals and accommodations provided. They wanted me on site all the time. I worked 18 hours a day with no time off for that whole time... and immediately had a breakdown as soon as that contract ended and I got out of the weird routine of it. I needed months to get back to anything like sanity.
The next job I got, and the job I still have, is a four day work week, 50% telecommuting gig. I have responsibilities and I'm on call 24x7 but as long as I keep everything working, I have a pretty sweet work/life balance. I can't bring myself to give that up.
I've been on both extremes and I consider myself extremely fortunate to be where I am right now.
-- I wanna decide who lives and who dies - Crow T. Robot, MST3K
I just counted and the first eleven posts on the main page come from you, BeauHD.
You're working too hard so you should take a break and allow the quality of posts get better.
You deserve to take a break.
The study assumes that employers want to treat their employees as human beings. In the United States, employees are inconvenient, failure-prone devices that insist on receiving a few dollars in pay for the work they do. This puts an unfair limit on the employer's ability to make money.
So if an employee has a heart attack or a stroke, or suffers from depression...that's their problem. If one of them occasionally loses their shit and goes on a killing spree...it's not going to be the CEO who gets shot.
So the hours an employee works need to be whatever the employer says. If an employer wants 60 hour weeks with another 10 hours of tacked-on, uncompensated "setup time", the employees should just shut up and thank god they have jobs.
And no health care. That could raise corporate taxes, and it's better for America if the employees die off when they can't work anymore.
I've calculated my velocity with such exquisite precision that I have no idea where I am.
To succeed, you have to put in the work, but, today's teen to 30's something have pretty much never had to work hard, thinking everything should be free or given to them, thanks to the indoctrination from government education.
You have the time and face it, you know you've been eyeing Pointdexter in the tight pants this whole time.
Creativity is like a fart...
if you put too much pressure on it, the result is a pile of shit!
1997-10-01 67.1%
2007-10-01 65.8%
2017-10-01 62.7%
Fewer Americans working means Americans are working less on average.
Mission Accomplished!
If you are working/living under favourable conditions, surrounded by practical, sensible and properly understanding people, with high freedom/resource availability to do whatever you want at any point, that advice might be somehow helpful for those not realising that being too concerned about work (or on anything else) isn't precisely positive. On the other hand, if your conditions are harder and/or your expectations can only be accomplished via a relevant amount of over-effort and/or in that moment you aren't able/have the resources to do what you really enjoy and/or you perform better under pressure, that wouldn't be too accurate. Similarly to what happens with everything else, it is a matter of perspective and, in this specific situation, personal priorities, interests, type of work you do, etc. Some people might enjoy being at work much more than doing what others consider amusing.
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In fact, it's 10,507 by Minoru Yoshida of Japan in October 1980. After which they stopped keeping track of that record.
So maybe you should start out with an analogy that isn't demonstrably false...
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People working 80 hours a week on a job they love and are passionate about probably isn't too much of a stretch. They start the day with "Today I get to..."
On the other hand, slogging through 80 hours of someone else's bullshit is killer. They start the day with "Today I have to..."
The editor just wanted to use the word "apotheosis" in a sentence. :)
I am working twelve hours per week, four hours every Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. Thursday through Sunday I enjoy my weekend and do some courses towards my comp sci degree. I have started working 40 hours like almost everyone else, automated the shit out of my job (sys/network admin), downsized to 20 hours, then downsized again to 12 hours. You know what? This is the best thing I have ever done. You drive a nice sports car, live in a mansion, dress exclusively, party only in the finest clubs? Fine for you, but realize that you are paying a very high price for all that. You are paying with precious hours of your life, which you are never getting back again. Stop watching television like a mindless zombie every day, use an ad blocker everytime you access the web. The more you stay away from all the stupid tabloid media and the marketing crap that is constantly raining down on you like liquid shit from a firehose, the more you will be able to live a happy and fullfilling live.
I've been reading western topics like this for a good 15 years now and, quite frankly, I don't believe North Americans are actually working more but rather they're occupying more of their time with work because they're working less.
For a good span of my life I had worked in IT and had to spend a good chunk of my time evaluating web logs for management and I would easily say that the majority of office workers with PCs would waste a huge chunk of time browsing Facebook, forums, baby sites, wedding sites, stock sites, local news sites, sports sites, dating sites, etc., etc. Hell, plenty of people paid their electric, gas, credit card, etc., bills at work as though they didn't have the internet at home... and the porn. I can't count the number of men that had porn stashes on their computers.
Certainly the amount of time wasn't consistent across the board and for some of these folks it was only 15 - 30 minutes a day on someone else's dime devoted to personal browsing but for many it was up to 2 hours. I'd say the average was an hour. And what else could they be doing at work? Are they conducting personal affairs over the phone?
The point I'm making has less to do with how pervasive internet slacking is in work environments that use computers but to question how many people are suffering because they're doing too little work at work?
to see a contribution from millennials or younger, any contribution, to anything, that wasn't a fundamental misunderstanding of science, technology, or life, or designed as a justification for their lack of maturity or laziness. You are going to have to work. Deal with it. The reason traditional things are traditional is because they have evolved over time (sorry that time didn't include you, but inserting yourself into and co-opting everything in sight just make you annoying, not 'brilliant' or 'poignant') and because they WORK, you don't need to 'disrupt' something perfectly functional. I know you feel like you will die without attention and acknowledgement. You won't, and your parents are pretty much the only people that think highly of you and encourage your delusions. It would be great if you'd decide to pull your own weight and actually listen to people that know more than you, because we do know more than you. You do not impress, not through your 'insight' or your sham 'accomplishments'.We are going to have to clean up the mess of a society you are creating and it would be so much easier if, given that you don't want to help, you'd get out of the goddamn way.
I will work till I'm 75 said the healthy man of 55
Work less or try being unemployed to make up for all those long, hard hours that's been leading you to burnout.
Find a part time gig to easily get back on track. Rust? If you sit on your behind long enough. Agile? On the treadmill, sure. Social media? Get real; this is /. FFS. I'm as anti-social as they come. Today's captcha? Intone What your muscles are if you have a pair of dumbbells next to your laptop, Mr. Trebek. I'll take All things go Big Bang for $500, Alex
As a surgeon in training I worked ~120 hours a week nonstop for 5 years!!!
Thatâ(TM)s what it takes to be good.
It didnâ(TM)t âoedestroy my lifeâ but it was tough. So what.
I now work much less. But still it is about 80+ hours a week and I take multiple vacations a year. Because I can afford it and âoerenewâ my batteries.
Multiple studies showed that surgeons do not make more mistakes after doing surgery while being awake and working for 36 hours.
I guess either surgeons are aliens or most other folks are lazy, built differently and / or lack the capacity to concentrate for long periods of time?
As to life expectancy, most physicians live longer than average, go figure?
Some places have the balls to say our employers enjoy working at home in there free time on work stuff. Now how true is that realy? or is more like we have so much work that they are pressured to do that / are so back logged that is only way to get lesser things done.
and marketing drives to hard and we get buggy games rushed out just to be patched later with fixes and even at times content that was not finished in the 1st release. and the later can be weeks to months.