Employees are everywhere: We buy from them. We sell to them. They work for us. They govern us. Our parents are employees, perhaps, or our children. We may even find one in our own bed, or we are employees ourselves. What are employees thinking about their jobs, in secrecy? How do they really feel about their lives spent in partial and temporary "slavery?" Discover psychological secrets and inconsistencies employees will never admit to themselves. Employed or self-employed, you must read this provocative and outright shocking material. Your human environment will never look the same. Disturbing insights and irritating truths will push you to discover new answers for yourself. This book will not tell you what to do or what not to do: it will inspire you to formulate your own answers to questions that jobs and employment challenge us with. 'How to Better Hate Your Job' invites you to experience an unimaginable adventure in all too familiar environments.
Jobs are coffins of individuality. The more jobs we are screaming for, the more jobs will be hated. Indeed it is natural that a job, or some aspects of it, is destined to be despised: "If you have a job without any aggravations, you don't have a job," said Malcolm Forbes. If you try to love a hated job, you are a hopeless self-help junkie. If you love your job, you have even greater problems. Those who hate their work have options and the freedom to explore alternatives. People who love their jobs don't. The usage of the term "love" as a description of your relationship with work is inflationary and absurd, anyway. You love your spouse, your children, and your job? Odd, to say the least. Jobs will always be hated, and you have a choice to do so in a frustrating way or with increasing satisfaction. There is no way to love a hated job. There are, however, infinite ways to hate it better. Unadulterated hatred for your job is a cornucopia of creativity and choices.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Jobs are coffins of individuality. The more jobs we are screaming for, the more jobs will be hated. Indeed it is natural that a job, or some aspects of it, is destined to be despised: "If you have a job without any aggravations, you don't have a job," said Malcolm Forbes. If you try to love a hated job, you are a hopeless self-help junkie. If you love your job, you have even greater problems. Those who hate their work have options and the freedom to explore alternatives. People who love their jobs don't. The usage of the term "love" as a description of your relationship with work is inflationary and absurd, anyway. You love your spouse, your children, and your job? Odd, to say the least. Jobs will always be hated, and you have a choice to do so in a frustrating way or with increasing satisfaction. There is no way to love a hated job. There are, however, infinite ways to hate it better. Unadulterated hatred for your job is a cornucopia of creativity and choices.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.