Mine is work and life balance. At least in this stage of my life, I prefer work and life balance. That’s why I’ve accepted a lenient schedule, I leave early when it’s acceptable to, I know that my hard work ultimately is accounting for nothing except to make people who’re not me richer than I’ll ever be.
So it’s like I don’t even see the point in working hard when I know a lot of the time, things will continue to be more or less the same, day in and day out. My position could change if I had a different life and in a different field of work where it would matter. But as it is, I prefer being home more and doing things at my leisure. Especially when I don’t have the commitment of children and currently, a relationship although being in one would kind of be nice though I don’t think there’s anyone out there who’d accept someone into this lifestyle.
But being at home more opens doors for me to pursue anything I want and indulge hobbies whereas if I was continuously doing hard work all of the time, I won’t have even an hour towards them as it would’ve been spent sleeping it away.
What about you?
I did the whole work work work thing, and the only reward i got was more work and more responsibility. There may be some time where the responsibility eases off and you can actually take time off, but i never saw it. Now I’m very much life-oriented. I don’t make as much money, but I have the time to actually do things, which is more important for me.
Taking seven medications a day so I don’t have to struggle to not think about suicide or worse. Best I can do.
I try to work as little as possible. I value happiness and spending time with loved ones and friends.
I spent many years working 110% and getting taken advantage of at several jobs. It wasn’t worth it and didn’t make me happy.
I may live frugally and near the poverty line, but I’m happy as can be.
I need to work enough to ensure that my personal life is comfortable, and that I’m saving enough for retirement.
I tried the climbing the ladder thing for a while. I just ended up in shitty job after shitty job to then be let go because I wasn’t perfect and the company hired underneath me. I’m done. I’m more concerned about my well being now and know I won’t be able to do that in higher positions where you’re expected to just tank stress on the daily.
less work, more life.
To most, due to lack of opportunity, hard work is just elitist propaganda these days.
So long as I have enough I prioritize work life balance. If my wife wanted kids, that would ironically push me more towards climbing the latter harder to provide for them, but as it stands I don’t need to push hard on the corporate ladder to have enough, more would be nice, but not nicer than more time with my hobbies and loved ones
I changed careers specifically for a better work life balance.
No more weekend work
Flexible hours
Working from home
Etc
Also higher salary
The older I get the more I tilt towards life. I don’t have to prove anything to myself or anyone else anymore.
Agreed. I like my current job more than the previous one that I put 23 years into, but I have to remind myself to value my time more than I had been. I still put in a lot of hours when I’m knee deep into a project, but it’s almost always at my own leisure that I do so. It’s a crazy balance of respecting myself while also fighting off the imposter syndrome because the guys in my team are always really supportive because of my experience. It’s strange going from a job where I have to defend my actions and choices to a job where I’m inherently trusted.
But yes, if I could go back, I would tell my younger self that my job pays the bills but it’s not who I am. Leave the job behind me after hours while doing what I can to do a good job while on the clock.
The most important thing I have learned is working hard when you see directly benefits. Working hard on your own school work or education is a great lesson because it’s all tied to you. Use that same work ethic at a large company you burn yourself for nothing. Own your own business where additional work directly benefits you is a great idea.
The latter, no contest. I work to live, not the other way around. Back in the day when I was cash strapped, I’d happily take on as many hours, but now I’m at the stage where I earn “enough” so the monetary threshold for me to get off my ass gets exponentially higher for each extra ounce of effort.
As an 18 YO, the first option. A short 3 years later snd i know the second option is the right choice. Maybe I’ll get my energy levels up again one day, but know that the world is rigged against us right now - and ti some extent, collapsing - so hustling likely won’t get you what you’re worth. Take the time to be comfy while things burn
It’s life/work balance. My life comes first, always.
Balance.
Work life balance, for sure. I worked my ass off and got blindsided and screwed by two different employers last year. Companies don’t give a shit about technical/support staff, there’s no reason to work hard unless you’re going to get paid for that extra effort.


