What Do Most People Do For A Living?

Washing dishes is the number one most hated chore in the U.S., according to a survey. The survey also revealed that organizing and dusting bedrooms is the least likely to spark joy, with only 11% of respondents calling it their preferred chore. Americans often outsource cleaning tasks to professionals, such as tile and grout cleaning, eco and green cleaning, and more.

Chores are essential for maintaining cleanliness and organization in homes, teaching responsibility. Personal chores include keeping personal spaces clean and tidy, while communal chores involve shared spaces. A comprehensive list of household chores can help manage these tasks effectively.

Communal chores include cleaning the fridge and pantry, laundry, and sanitizing/wiping the bathroom. There is a three-way tie between America’s least favorite chore, between doing dishes, sanitizing/wiping the bathroom, and doing laundry.

The most commonly hated household chore is cleaning the bathroom, especially having to clean the toilet. Consistent household tasks include meal preparation, dishwashing after each meal, removing shoes when entering the home, and placing items in shared spaces. Over 59% of people dislike cleaning up after their pets, while other commonly disliked chores include mopping the floors, trimming hedges, and mowing.

According to survey responses, four in five people spend at least two hours per week doing all household chores. Single people’s top chores before bringing someone home include picking up clutter, cleaning the bathroom, cleaning the kitchen, and vacuuming.


📹 Most people vs caribbean people (doing chores)

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What is the first most hated chore?

The 10 top most hated household chores include cleaning the bathroom, particularly the toilet, due to various reasons such as clogged drains, hair removal, and the spread of germs like Coli and staphylococcus. Despite these issues, cleaning the bathroom is the second cleanest room in the home, and despite its less glamorous nature, people still prioritize it in their homes. Overall, cleaning the bathroom is a crucial task that many individuals find challenging but rewarding.

What is the least popular chore?

The study revealed that cleaning toilets was the least enjoyable task for single men, with a mean score of 48. Three respondents indicated a dislike for the task, while only 37 expressed a similar sentiment. Two married men also indicated that they found the task challenging. The second and third most disliked chores were identified as removing hair from drains and cleaning bathrooms.

What should 17 year olds be doing?
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What should 17 year olds be doing?

Teens aged 17-17 are developing responsibility skills, focusing on understanding rules, independence, and self-care. They are also taking care of their bodies, relationships, homework, extracurriculars, and contributing to the household. Teens aged 15-19 are exploring their adult identity and responsible behavior, while also considering their future plans. As they grow, they may test boundaries, forget things, and break rules. Guidance is needed to address hurt relationships, revisit missed obligations, and repair harm.

As a parent, it is crucial to be purposeful and deliberate in teaching responsibility to teens. Making responsible decisions involves identifying problems, analyzing situations, solving problems, evaluating, reflecting, and considering the ethical implications of choices. This is a normal part of their development and is necessary for learning how to take responsibility.

How many chores should a 14 year old have?

There is no strict rule on how many chores children should do, but in elementary school, 10-20 minutes of daily help is recommended, with more on weekends and summer days. Teenagers can do 20-30 minutes, with bigger chores on weekends. While it can be frustrating, assigning chores helps manage the to-do list and helps children grow into responsible young adults. Gradually increasing expectations helps them mature, gain confidence, and teach valuable life skills they will need when they leave home. Gradually increasing expectations can also help children develop valuable life skills for their future lives.

Should a 12 year old have chores?

At this age, children can perform tasks independently without constant reminders. Parents should hold them accountable and check their daily chores. The goal is to help them become responsible when no one is watching. Examples of chores include car washing, dusting, raking leaves, operating appliances, and babysitting younger siblings. For high school and beyond, chores should be done for up to 30 minutes a day. As children progress through high school, they will be able to handle tasks independently, making this the ideal age to prepare them for independence.

Should my 15 year old do chores?

As children transition into adolescence and adolescence into early adulthood, household responsibilities play an instrumental role in their personal development. They contribute to the management of the domestic environment, develop competencies that will be useful in adult life, and learn to work effectively with others. Typical household tasks include vacuuming shared living areas, washing and vacuuming vehicles, and maintaining shared spaces within the home.

How often should I chores?

The average person spends nearly 6 hours a week cleaning their house, with most homeowners cleaning the floor, vacuuming, cleaning the bathroom, and dusting furniture once a week. They also clean kitchen countertops, appliances, and washing dishes daily. In bedrooms, they change sheets and pillowcases weekly and dust surfaces as needed. Living rooms vacuum and dust furniture weekly, increasing frequency with pets or frequent guests. Windows are cleaned monthly, with more frequent cleaning if needed. Research by the American Cleaning Institute shows that many Americans wonder if they are cleaning enough and correctly.

What are personal chores?

The term “personal chores” is used to describe tasks that are related to maintaining one’s own personal cleanliness. In contrast, “communal chores” are tasks that pertain to shared spaces. One may organize chores by room or task type, but a more action-oriented approach is to group chores by frequency.

Should a 17 year old do chores?
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Should a 17 year old do chores?

Teenagers are becoming increasingly independent and peer-focused, and while they may seem to be out of their comfort zone, they can still benefit from doing chores. When teenagers are encouraged to do chores and receive positive reinforcement, they feel they have made a significant contribution, boosting their confidence and competence. This helps strengthen family bonds and equips them with the skills they need to succeed independently. Chores are particularly important as they teach teens the necessary skills to function independently, such as cooking and cleaning.

High school can be demanding, and homework may seem like a chore, but it shouldn’t be an excuse for teenagers not to contribute to the household. They will need to balance their work schedule with cooking and cleaning when they eventually move out. Overall, chores are essential for teens to develop the necessary skills for success in their future lives.

Should a 19 year old have chores?
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Should a 19 year old have chores?

19-year-olds are typically expected to contribute to household maintenance, especially if living with their parents. They are capable of doing all household chores, making it reasonable for them to do so. For a 12-year-old girl, appropriate chores include cleaning her bedroom, helping with housekeeping, cooking meals, doing laundry, and yard work. For 13-year-olds, many families expect them to help with household chores around the house.


📹 Why Most People Hate Their Jobs

Ihatemyjob #quietquitting #iquitmyjob A recent poll revealed that 85% of people are unhappy in their jobs. This has led to “quiet …


What Do Most People Do For A Living?
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Rae Fairbanks Mosher

I’m a mother, teacher, and writer who has found immense joy in the journey of motherhood. Through my blog, I share my experiences, lessons, and reflections on balancing life as a parent and a professional. My passion for teaching extends beyond the classroom as I write about the challenges and blessings of raising children. Join me as I explore the beautiful chaos of motherhood and share insights that inspire and uplift.

About me

90 comments

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  • we’re all underpaid. that’s it. that’s the only problem. if i spent 40 hours of my week and actually got a good life out of it i wouldn’t mind. I shouldn’t have to be a super high skilled person to live. that’ll just lead to one over saturated field and not enough laborers. Both are needed and deserve a livable wage.

  • I ticks me off when interviewers try to crap on my skill because I work retail. They say it’s too easy for what they do even if I bring up all the parallels. They seem to think I do one task all day, but we’re always short staffed. I’m doing the work of multiple people, but an interviewer had the nerve to say “since you work retail, this job might be to busy for you.” Busy? I come home and pass out from exhaustion. But they’re saying I can’t handle a desk job answering phones. Even if that were true, how are people supposed to prove their skills unless they come from a higher position? Is everyone working their way down the ladder now?

  • Not to be depressed on main but I honestly don’t see the point in working or even being alive. All of my dreams and goals for the future are currently so unattainable and unaffordable, there’s literally no point in getting up in the morning. And it’s not even extravagant stuff either. I just wanna buy a house, have a car, and a couple of kids. That’s literally it. There’s no way I’d be able to afford that on my own. Everything just keeps getting more and more expensive everyday. It feels like I’m drowning, like nothing I do matters and that I was only born to make money for the 1%

  • I’m a nurse and I picked this career because of the lifestyle. Work very gruelling 12 hour shifts 4 days in a row, and then you get 4-5 days off. Work hard, and then get rewarded with a long weekend every other week. I’m thankful that I get to leave my work at work. I could never work the corporate 9-5.

  • The entire job system in America is so broken. I’ve had a really difficult year this year because I was laid off from a prestigious company early in 2023. I’ve since applied for hundreds of jobs, tried to reflect on what I want, and even had a handful of jobs (some I quit because the environment was so bad). Trying to find the role that not only suits your skills and interests, but also pays a decent amount and allows you the most basic of work-life balance is nearly impossible. After my experience in the job market this year, I’ve decided I will not settle and be driven by fear because even the most secure seeming things can be gone in a moment.

  • Adjusting from uni to 9-5 is ROUGH!! I’m also a gen z that recently graduated, uni was mostly remote due to covid and for my last year I had barely any classes, now I have a full time job with commute up to 4h per day (I can’t move) and the first week I cried and had mental breakdowns 24/7, it was terrible. Thankfully I’m on a hybrid schedule now so WFH days are saving my mental health, but I totally relate to the girl in the tiktok, going to the office every day with long commute is miserable especially if you are fresh out of college, the shock is just too much 😭

  • You would not believe the many month long depressive episode that I had where my heart rate just wouldn’t go below “ABSOLUTE PANIC.” All because after struggling my entire life and barely surviving my 20s, I got a well paying job where I could start saving money; and then the cost of rent went up, then food, then literally everything else. And now I am living exactly the same financial situation as I was in my 20s, but in a tech career.

  • I hate how hard it is to get days off. Theres no one to cover EVER. If i ask for days off somehow its on me to find a cover so I can get my pto approved. You get shamed if you arent a ‘team player,’ so you cover for people and then they wont do the same for you. IF you wanna take off a week ur a villian for making other people work more while ur gone.

  • Uk-based Asian here and I have to say which of what you said is reflective of British and wider Western culture as well. The Chinese, Japanese and Korean are guilty of this corporate worshipping pandemic as well. We treat the economy as of it’s a natural phenomenon and not a man made system that we can improve upon. I do think that each individual stuck in this matrix can get out of it but it starts with a strong sense of self-worth, reflection, getting in touch with nature and God/ universe or whatever belief system you have. It sounds far fetched but the work starts on the spiritual and energetic level.

  • I am part of the 15% who love their job. Is there drama and unnecessary BS at my job? Yes. Are there bullies and disrespectful coworkers? Yes. The difference maker for me is that I love the actual work I do. And I am very fortunate to have an isolated position and most of the projects and tasks I work on are solo. I don’t really have to compromise with toxic others to get my work done. It’s a blessing. My boss leaves me alone as long as I’m doing my work well. There are days when I literally don’t hear a single word from my boss even though her office is only about 20 feet from mine. There is a nasty bully in my office, but because I’m able to get my work done without involving anyone else, including this bully person, my work isn’t affected. And because my work isn’t being affected, I’m in a really good and strong position to make an official complaint about her bullying. And I’m well protected because it is a state government office. And good benefits too. I got REALLY LUCKY. I love my job.

  • Burned out quickly from putting my 110% into my jobs. No promotions, raises, etc. I just got diagnosed with autism too. The way the ADA works is only AFTER you are hired. I desperately need help finding a job that is willing to accommodate me, APPLYING, all the social dance that is interviewing (im brutally honest and wont lie in interviews, which feels better to me, but im still unemployed), and getting hired. I don’t have the skills to GET the job im already qualified for (BS grad). Also dealing with CFS from covid doesn’t make work any easier when wages are stagnant and cost of living feels like it isn’t even considered

  • I fucking love my job. I’m a massage therapist, and even though it’s not my passion, and it doesn’t pay as much as some other gigs, I still love it. I work a flexible 20-30 hour week, I get to listen to audiobooks/music/podcasts all day, I feel like I have a meaningful purpose in life helping people with their pain and stress, and no one leaves me feeling worse than when they came in. It’s not perfect, but I feel extremely privileged to have a career that I like and am good at.

  • I cried 3 times at work today. I cried on the bus on the way home. That’s how overworked & stressed I am. These companies REFUSE to hire more people & make us all do the jobs of 2-3 people for the price of 1. I look at my checks every week and feel angry and taken advantage of. The check ain’t matching the amount of work I’m doing. Can’t even afford my own place with this bs. A person can only take so much. & YES I went to college. THE DEGREE DONT MATTER. Job postings are fake & not really hiring. America is ghetto as hell

  • If all your time and soul is getting sucked out at your job, you don’t have the energy to fulfill yourself. Creativity, making memories, loving others, taking care of your household and pets, those fulfill your life. Grinding up the corporate ladder just to comfortably support your household leaves no time for that. Some people can throw 110% of their selves into their work and feel fulfilled I’m sure, but it’s unrealistic to expect that from everyone.

  • I worked as an Uber driver in NYC when it first emerged. This was the happiest time in my life. What made me stop driving was the passengers. Questions about my financials, random drops of the ‘N’ word, kids and dogs making a mess in my vehicle, snooty questions about my life path and my age, lack of common courtesy, people trying to make me into the personal driver, the list goes on!! Today I’m a behaviorist and I’m sure my time spent in NYC contributed to this direction in life !!!

  • I can relate to the crying young woman. I lived that life! I wondered what’s the point of being alive when I’m just living to work Mon-Fri, then do chores all weekend long because by the time I get home at 6 or 7 I just collapse! Life is pointless!!! When I switched to working from home, I can now enjoy life again. 40 hours a week is still too much and I still don’t make enough money, but at least I have hours more that I didn’t have before.

  • Mine was overwhelm. I was a teacher, I’ve done all grades & ages. It’s exhausting! Teachers never clock out, it’s constant work, little pay, a lot of social headache and danger, constant change and a person can’t be that flexible and available and ready for all that. All the training in the world isn’t enough to survive it and teachers are leaving in droves!!!

  • I despise my job with the heat of a thousand suns. I’m 55 now. I work in a small company for a belligerent negative toxic man-child. The man is a pathological liar. He says terrible things about every employee behind their backs. He causes chaos. He doesn’t want us to leave the office until he does, and he often works until 6:00. I have a one hour drive home! So, I’m out of my home for 12 or more hours hours per day. I work, go home, and sleep. I have no life at all. He doesn’t want us to take time off because he doesn’t. I make decent money, but that’s it. I can’t enjoy my money. I cry every day because I can’t believe this is where I am at 55 years old. I’ve worked hard my whole life, and now I’m stuck in a gray cubicle working for a narcissistic tyrant. I’ve been searching for another job, but nobody wants to hire me. Sad to say, but it has not gotten better for me. It’s gotten worse.

  • I stayed with an older family friend for six months before I bought my house. She was 60, single and she absolutely hated her job. Everyday she would wake up and angrily moan and groan as she walked into her home office to work her 9-5. I literally would think to myself that I did not want to be like that when I become that age.

  • I’m in school to be a librarian. They get paid dirt and people commonly believe you can walk in off the street with no education and get a librarian job. People often think it’s funny when you explain that no, you do need a master’s degree for this job. Like the job is a joke just bc they don’t know anything about it. But it’s what I love to do, so it’s what I’m pursuing anyway

  • Also, most j9bs that are women dominated aren’t valued by the collective society and are usually underpaid for the high level work/outcomes expected. American work culture also doesn’t provide enough vacation and sick time to allow employees to tap out for our mental and physical health. Some jobs are unnecessary stressful and political. Healthcare is way more political than many people realize. Normalize not trying to force employees to participate in bullshit team building exercises. Use that time and money to make the workplace less toxic, more healthy, and genuinely efficient. 😒😒😞😞

  • I’m sick of these jobs. 1. Constant baiting and switching, misleading, or lying about job requirements. 2. Inflexible. If I’m such a “low skilled” worker, then me wanting a couple days off here and there to visit family shouldn’t be an issue. I shouldn’t have to wait a year to get “vacation” time. 3. Socially accepted to have workplace harassment and abuse. I’m not just speaking about how people in management can verbally attack you. I had one who would THROW things at the workers and nothing gets done when reported.

  • The big error here is taking a job personally. A job is not about making you happy or fulfilled. Your co-workers are not your friends, your employer will not reward you for loyalty. It is simply time exchanged for money. Once you stop making it personal, it becomes a lot easier to navigate to a working situation that suits you.

  • I have graduated uni and I am working in a store right now. I have a degree and I am stuck in a minimum wage job. It’s unionized and it’s a government store but I am miserable. Yeah I got a pension but my job is not glamorous and I use my hands and have cuts from product all the time. I ask the same 4 questions to customers 1000 times a day and it’s exhausting, demeaning and under stimulating. And then I get home and have almost no energy to peruse my passions or what actually makes me happy. Being an adult isn’t worth it and I am depressed and I am worried about falling back into feeling like not living. I have not been suic!dal for almost 3 and a half years now and I don’t want to go back there.

  • Ablism is probably the biggest obstacle for me. I’m autistic and I am quite certain that I have been passed over for jobs I’m qualified for just because I don’t make eye contact or I “fidget” during my interview. Also, a 40 hour work work is just not something I can do, but part time jobs usually don’t give benefits, so I have to navigate that with caution.

  • When an american associate I work with told me that she was getting her hips replaced I calculated in my head based from my dads (paid!) recovery time of around 9 months here in Germany (which includes a lenghty rehabilitation stay) and concluded she must be out at least for 6 weeks. She was back at her desk after 8 days. It’s wild how much Americans (need to) work.

  • A friend of mine just had to quit her job because she needs medication to live, and her job never provided insurance even though upon interviewing it was promised. I went to school and have 10 years of my trade under my belt working my dream job and I can’t afford insurance or time off. I am living in a studio apartment with my ex, saving to move out next month and I’m terrified because one single bag of groceries can easily run you 100 literal dollars in the city I live in, and commuting ends up costing me more money and then I want to die everyday because I also get migraines from driving. My ex works full time and commutes and can’t even afford an apartment out of the city, genuinely idk how he is going to feed himself. All of my rich tech clients are MISERABLE right now ALL looking for new work because they quite literally do not stop working. Working is bleak right now.

  • Thanks for speaking about this! There is enough money to go around for people to follow their passions and make successful careers out of it (if they choose to). I don’t think addictions stem from negative work environments but I do think negative work environments enhance people’s addictions. I don’t think these work situations create addicts per se- the addiction mindset was likely in the person before starting that job

  • There’s so many reasons people hate their jobs these days. From micromanaging, to no management, rude upper management or just as bad rude lower level position people, lack of career growth opportunities, bad benefits, and the main one BAD OVERALL PAY! They expect so much from who they hire for so little. You can’t pay someone less than 60k doing a job that is meant for at least 5 other people and expect them to be happy especially when they still have to use that money to eat, rent/pay for housing, gas, and have the occasional vacation/break it’s demeaning.

  • I don’t think it’s necessary to enjoy your job, but it is important that you don’t hate it and that you feel you’re being fairly compensated. But for most people, a job is just how you make money and isn’t going to fulfill you on a spiritual level or anything. That being said, we are all definitely underpaid, overworked, not given enough time off, and benefits (insurance, retirement) keep getting worse.

  • Millennial here. I completely sympathize with the girl who has no time to live. I entered the workforce 12 years ago and hated every once of it. Day one my parents asked me how my day went. My feet hurt and everything was so fast paced that my slow and calculated mind couldn’t keep up. They told me to suck it up. That’s life. Study hard to live comfortably. But I was disillusioned by both doctors, jailers and teachers who took work home. I hope change will emerge from this movement. We can all use a breather.

  • I can’t remember who said it this, but I remember someone saying something along the lines of “20-30 years ago you could work hard and live well, but we live in a society now, where working hard no longer pays off” and I just think that’s really sums up our world now. Also the “just go to college argument” is so dumb. I couldn’t go to college for a variety of reasons, and now I’m a grown adult, working minimum wage with bills to pay. How am I supposed to pay my rent and all my bills when going to college 5 days a week, when I’m already working 5 days a week + overtime just the scrape by. Even if I worked myself to death, working after school hours and on weekends, I still wouldn’t earn enough to pay my bills currently, no even mentioning the sudden student loans.

  • I’m still perusal the article and will pick back up where i left off once i leave work. But based off of the title alone, for me personally, it’s the amount of hours spent at work while being underpaid in this horrible economy. Then, only have a 2 day weekend to breathe & do things i enjoy like hanging with family/friends or simply being at home. I wish I was one of those people that truly enjoy working lol, but I just have to find ways to deal with the fact that i am not. Hopefully it gets better🙏🏽

  • Leading a bit far, but productivity actually rised in the last about two centuries. This SHOULD mean everyone has to work less for money / substantial needs and more to arts, hobbies, friends… Thomas Morus, centuries ago, envisioned a world where work would be a smart part of your life, but the reality is the opposite: Work is our worth, consumption our goal. A lot of jobs do not seem to serve a goal. We are not caring for anyone. We are not growing veggies. We are not teaching future generations. We work mostly for the gain of big companies and billionaires. Not for us or the society. To meet our basic needs there is money in the hands of auctioners and owners. Elon Musk alone could probably pay the medicine bills for every american without insurance. When you look at it this way it is really, really no wonder that we are not motivated to work the whole day just to live paycheck to paycheck and without security, rest or sense. Yes, capitalism is a cruel mess.

  • Great article! So much corporate work is not about achieving anything useful; it’s just producing something you can get someone else to pay for that’s going in a shredder next year, and also the internal performance of hierarchy and domination… bosses and managers pushing everyone else around as they’re trying to get things done despite them.

  • I used to like my job. It changed a lot tho. Went from no phones to phone heavy. So I tried to pivot. Going though background check process now. I found that I don’t like phones. So I purposely looked for jobs where I don’t need to be on the phone all day everyday. Hoping everything goes smoothly. I need something new, with growth opportunities when it comes to skill set. I don’t trust any job to provide me with a promotion. Self promoting is literally what is keeping me and others above water.

  • It feels like we work our lives away just to not be able to afford basic living… I have a degree and work 40 hours a week in a position that requires an extensive set of skills and I still wouldn’t be afford to live without splitting rent + bills + food with my boyfriend. Even though we split everything, I still have nothing left at the end of the month… the money I make only covers basic stuff. So like why should we like working if the return is going to be basically nothing? At least in the past people would reap the financial rewards of working

  • Hey Ashley, I’m a new subscriber and I’ve been binge-watching your articles. I love your social commentary. You’re smart and reflective and I just hope your articles reach more and more people. I feel like a lot of people I meet just don’t really reflect on things, and they follow the crowd, and they’re unhappier than ever. Thank you for making articles like these! <3

  • Ive been working full time since 2019, so im part of the younger generation, but i have some experience. My advice to anyone is to keep looking for a job that makes the day go by fast, allows flexibility, pays well, and doesn’t expect you to work overtime. Start side hustles and build your dream life while you are young! Im so glad i have started this

  • Oh I’ve quit multiple jobs 😂. My main thing is not having enough time to spend with my child, I’ve missed many of my child’s “firsts” due to a job hemming me up at the office there is no such thing as work-life balance. My second concern was the pay, most jobs want to pay you the bottom of the barrel give you way more work than the current job title allows and expect you to work OT to make up for the missing wages and it still not enough to live off of. My final reason is I could be doing something fulfilling, working hard for myself while having fun in the experience.

  • It’s so funny, I just watched Brielle’s article on Instagram for the first time just minutes before I clicked on your article. And like so many others, I felt every single thing she said so hard! Nobody prepared us for how lonely adulthood would get. It’s so common to only see friends every few months or feel like there’s no time to find a romantic partner. Right now I’m lucky to WFH doing what one may call a “lazy girl job” and while it brings me peace and work-life balance, I am starting to feel I need more of a challenge and of course, higher pay. However I’m not looking forward to getting back back into the politics involved with getting one of these “coveted jobs” as you mentioned…

  • I was never able to assimilate and accept working a regular job like it was some civic duty. I’ve worked miserably, begrudgingly my entire adult life. I had to be faced with the ugliest behaviors from people everyday, and nothing is worth that to me. It took me years to finally begin to carve a niche out for myself.

  • Ahe si right, you get stressed then buy items you dont need. So then you have debts, so you have to stay at your job you dont like! Break the circle!!! Live below your needs, stay out of debt and save your money. Then try to invest/ trade or just have money at the bank so that you can leave the job you hate

  • It’s so mad. It’s happening England too so my friends work so hard. Can never afford a house yet. They’re pain extortionate amount of rent, get the bank say you can’t afford a mortgage that’s a crack of s***!! I’m very lucky. Fortunate to be the position. I am in because I own my house outright with my partner! I’m also I’m a stay at home Mum I only like 2 jobs that I had out of 5 jobs!!

  • I don’t even work a full work week so that I have time to be a homemaker, I enjoy doing the cooking and the cleaning for my partner and my kid, but oh my god I’m constantly running on empty. I’m 23 so supposedly my energy levels are only supposed to crash from here but like I have no energy ever for anything. And even if I did have energy what am I gonna do? I can’t afford to go out or go to fun activities, I haven’t been on a vacation in 7 years. My older family members chastise me for “not working more” when I could take advantage of working a full work week “then I would have more money”. As if I didn’t know that, so not helpful. And even my older millennial family members make comments about how “I should be out enjoying my 20’s” and “im too worried about my responsibilities” as if I even have a choice 😭 I’ve been working to support myself since the age of 15 and it’s so sad I’m almost a decade of work in with nothing to show for it- Certainly no savings

  • Because most jobs today: 1. Require CEO-level experience for an entry-level position. 2. Will either underpay you, or they pay you efficiently for one person’s job while having you do 3-4 people’s work Also, people are forced to do jobs they don’t want to do because of the higher pay, and even then, that higher pay barely gets you back to the surface. And not to mention that any time we try to talk about any of this, there will almost always be a boomer in our ear accusing us of being lazy; that they “had it so much harder” and never complained no matter what job they had.

  • The issue is that when older generations suffered through a miserable job there was at least the sense of security and pension involved with that job. Companies no longer give a payoff for that suffering,they let people go and cut benefits or don’t give benefits at all. There is no longer the guarantee of a payoff for the suffering.

  • I’m a dentist. I have never understood work environments that treat dental assistants and hygienists terribly. A dish washer at a restaurant is seen as the “bottom of the totem pole,” yet a restaurant cannot serve food on the table without dishes. My job is the same way, and that’s why I appreciate my coworkers so much. People comment “but you became a doctor…you went to way more schooling….etc…” But I respond with “that doesn’t make me a better person or more worthy than my staff.”

  • Most of our addictions are born from complex trauma and have gone unhealed. Complex trauma comes from frequent (enough) scenarios where we are defenseless and unable to cope. That sounds like a toxic work environment to me! It just triggers us day in and day out because it’s our life line and we need it. Lord knows society doesn’t respect the homeless so that’s not an option!

  • I’m trying to get an online career launched (on another website, not this one) but BOY is it hard to fit everything I need to do into a schedule that has 40 hours taken out of it. It’s absolutely miserable to try and do things outside of work because I just don’t have the energy and, if it fails, it’s heart crushing because you spent all that limited time accomplishing nothing… So it can be hard to find motivation to actually start. I’ll be honest and say that I’m scared. I’m terrified that I’ve chosen the wrong path… People always say we have more time, but I really don’t. There’s only so much more I can take of my 9-5 before I break. But if I start another job it’ll take even more energy because I’ll have to adjust to new people and work and have no guarantees that it’ll be any better.

  • I’m a “skilled laborer” who works in Texas. I’m technically employed by the Texas Department of Agriculture and I don’t hate my job but for what I do as a licensed professional in my field I definitely don’t get payed all that much ($16/hr). I have friends who work in fast food that get paid more than me, in the same state. The CEO actually fronts a lot of expenses on his employees in my company, covering a lot on Insurance (cost to provide increases but we don’t pay more), a very good 401K plan, provides and pays for company vehicles that we can use for any work related commmutes, even if it’s just to and from the office. I have a job that I feel is important and has a lot of perks and I don’t hate my work, but even with some overtime and commission pay I rarely ever take home more than $2800 a month.

  • How do I always end up on these types of articles on Sunday evenings. . .?😪😪 The anxiety I feel every Sunday night knowing that I have to log in the next day and put on a “performance” for a job that I am not engaged in or interested in is just sucking the soul out of me. I don’t want to work 9 to 5, I don’t want to start my own business, I just want to be happy and enjoy my life comfortably.

  • This GenXer here is tired of the 9-5 plantation. I’m tired of trading my time for bearly enough to get by, with little to no chance of moving up in the ranks and have nothing to show for it. I’m pursuing entrepreneurship so I can finally have something to show for my hard work. Dear young folks, don’t let these older people talk smack to have you as miserable as them. They can make a late stage change as much as I am doing now. Young folks have more time on your side. Do you, boos.

  • Work as a concept is so fucking foul and a waste of life. I literally do not have time to do stuff that i actually care about. I dont know how im supposed to date. Im almost 24 and have never had a girlfriend. I dont make enough money to move out. Didnt go to college cuz can’t afford it. My life is literally just work for no reason. I’m not suicidal but i just feel like why am i even alive? And we all die eventually anyway so what am i even working towards. The end result is oblivion no matter what i do so why work.

  • OMG 85 percent are unhappy? So sad… honestly not surprising but still, so sad. 🙁 Definite crisis. I’m a therapist and my job is intense and demanding but I’m also super passionate about it and love it so much. It’s all I’ve ever wanted since I was 5 years old. I wish everyone could feel the same level of enagement I feel. I know it’s rare and I feel so lucky. I also have VERY firm boundaries and turn my work phone off after work/never check email and never take my work home. I know that helps to protect me from burnout!

  • Plumbers, electricians, sewage workers and other such backgrpund essential jobs are often the hardest to do, but are often paid much more than most jobs with much less required experience. I am confused on this elimination of the social stigma around jobs, cause there are genuinely “more useful” jobs. Some even reliant on the others. Like an internet content creator is out of work whalen their power is out.

  • Honestly, I loved my job as a teacher. What I didn’t love was the low pay, the sometimes long hours, and the expectation that I would be responsible for all of society’s failures to lift people out of hard times. The actual job was amazing, though once you stripped away all of the bureaucratic stuff and the cultural biases against teachers and education as a whole. I also wish I had had more support systems as a single mom. I quit teaching largely because I couldn’t manage the job and a family too, and it broke my heart. One of my former students literally started crying when I showed up to watch her dance performance after quitting. I want to go back to that job, but it’s just not feasible. My new job is okay. I don’t hate it, but I don’t have the same passion for it. You can’t work a job that you love if it can’t meet your needs.

  • What baffles me is that in society and not just American I see that in Germany where I live too we collectively apparently find it okay to work hard or strive for that. Both countries are in the top 5 richest countries it’s insanity that we STILL work a 40h work week. Sociologist 100 years ago expected that we have 4h work days by the year 2000. Statistically our productivity sky rocketed but the work hours stayed the same since the 8h work day became the norm. Why does our society not strive for less work? (Probably cause the top 1% brainwashed us to place our worth into hard work and are greedy) As an American I would be even more pissed, in Germany we have universal healthcare, free university and way better worker laws, how does America a richer country than us doesn’t have it and somehow brainwashed some of their citizens to find it okay or think this wouldn’t benefit them. We live in a insane world. We need change desperately, fuck capitalism. The power needs to lay within the workforce not the top 1%.

  • The issue is older generations DIDN’T suffer the way the younger generations do. There was a time when young people could afford to live in the same cities they worked in, they worked hard but they didn’t have crazy long commutes. Also before computers, things took longer. If we had something to send out, it had to be mailed; today documents are uploaded, things go much faster today. Look at it this way, when I was a child, television stopped at about 2 or 3 am. There used to be down time. Today everything is 24/7/365, and it’s killing people.

  • Best advice I was ever given on this is that it’s normal to have some days where you don’t like your job, busy seasons, an annoying coworker, etc. But if you’re sitting in your car each day fighting down the dread before you go in….then it’s time for a change. I have to say I’ve been very fortunate comapred to a lot of people. Even when my workload gets heavy at times, my leadership is actually really good about checking in to make sure I’m doing okay, not getting on me if I need an extension on something, etc.

  • Something nobody talks about: the boomer’s jobs were easier. They didn’t have to clock in and out, for example. I know for a fact, there was much more time to chat with their colleagues, much less workload, so when they came home, they were relaxed. I also know stories about people who only worked 3 hours during their 8 hours job. Rest of the time they drank coffee and chatted. That’s something the boomers don’t understand. The workload. The stress. They didn’t have it like that. A good example: when a house was build, at least where I live, this took a year! They even stopped the construction during winter and continued the next year. Nowadays, a house is build in 3 months! This is in every job similar. Desk jobs were easier, now there is so much unnecessary paperwork. With the invention of computers, a lot of things became easier, but also more stressful. In my job, when I started, I needed 3 computer programs. Now I require 13 to make it work. You have to constantly learn, everything is changing, everything is faster. Again, in my job, when I started 8 years ago (which isn’t so long ago) it was much easier to be successful. Nowadays, you have to work double, and you must have improved skills to be successful. If I went back in time, I wouldn’t be able to earn the money I earn today with the work I did back then. I had to improve, to learn more skills, to work harder and faster and more efficient.

  • Fun fact. Soviet Union obviously has nothing good to it’s name but at that time people earned the wage that could let them live. Many didn’t have to get a uni education as an engineer in a factory earned the same as a regular worker. A handyman could possible make more money basically if worked extra. University was free ofc. You could be an alcoholic but still with a flat.

  • i dont make enough to have a one bedroom rental but im lucky in the sense that one of my best friends dads has a extra house that he lets us live at for cheap rent especially in the town we live in rent normally is around 1000-2500 a month the rent in my hoem town at the cheapest is normally 3000 a month but because my friends dad knows im gonna be a good tenant, pay rent on time and not break any laws or the lease agreement he gives me 850 a month for rent which i can usually barely pay for on my own but compared to everything its dirt cheap and i can’t thank him enough for his kindness

  • I work part time but I have a crappy food service job. I’m working 3 positions with 1 cook sometimes .Some of my co workers don’t even show up for their shift. The ac barely works. It has reached over 100 degrees in the building & I also don’t enjoy food service, it overstimulates me & I don’t like the fast paced environment it’s makes me really anxious.

  • One of my managers has been SUPER mad at me lately. What did I do? I accidentally revealed my work schedule to the supervisor, and after a gobsmacked look, he revealed that I’m actually not ALLOWED to be there after a certain time. After I told my mother this, she suggested that I apologize to my manager. The American dream in the works, folks🙃

  • 14:23 Lol these people are crazy. I worked in the service industry WHILE I was in school getting straight A’s in my associate of science in mathematics (heavy on the math classes and had a lot of biology/anatomy classes since it’s a general science degree) before transferring to a university for computer science where I also maintained a very high gpa. A lot of people in the service industry are pretty smart and are there making money while they go to school. A friend of mine who served tables with me is now a lawyer, several are nurses, some own a business that’s doing pretty well, etc. These people are delusional if they think service workers are dumb or lack work ethic.

  • Please American, more remote workers. My commute is the worst part of my job. It takes 45 minutes to get there. I use to live closer but had to move. I could not afford to find a new place to live close to work. The traffic makes is much slower and longer. It is an extra 30 minutes round trip because of the traffic. There is frequently accidents and always grid lock. My job is tolerable. I can’t do remote working, but could work from home. I need more training, clients and home equipment for that. If people can do their jobs from home, please let them. The traffic is terrible and I am sick of it. I need to be in person for now since I have on hands trade job. You don’t have to go to college. You can learn a trade and often be paid while learning it. I learned a trade at 40, but not skilled enough to be on my own yet.

  • yep. worked as a retail worker and made around $400CA every 2 weeks. when people don’t realize that we’re all acting, they’re rude. the amount of shit i had to go through from random everyday people for no reason was insane. I quit because i was so mentally tired of trying to keep myself composed and in a box.

  • I would say I feel unhappy and unfulfilled in my work because it’s a boring, mostly pointless job (HR). There are jobs I would prefer to do (working in fashion or with animals), but none of the jobs in my interests pay a living wage. I have to work a BS job to pay my bills. I actually like working hard if it’s on things I’m interested in, but nobody wants to work hard at a pointless job that only exists to fill shareholder pockets.

  • I don’t mind working. I will work 10 hrs a day FROM HOME. I will no longer spend 50 hours a week in an office and 2 hour drive time. My kids are being raised by a teacher who I dont even know teaching things that are a complete waste of time. I want to be home & I want my kids home. I recently experienced a terrible situation and Ive been constantly thinking about how I can stay away from the office. I got a Protective Order issued against a coworker for stalking/harassment. When i provided a copy to my director, just 5 days later I was “laid off” effective immediately. The coworker is still employed. It was just a very toxic atmosphere and it created physical health issues. Good luck to everyone out there. We will get there. I dont want my kids to have to spend their 1 beautiful life working for assholes.

  • I quite enjoy my job. There’s very little to do and I get paid decently for it. What I object to is having to come into work every day to do pretty much nothing when I could be at home doing what I really like and using my time efficiently. Of course, my employer isn’t going to pay me to stay home, but a girl can dream. I have had hundreds of jobs I absolutely hated in the past and each time I kept telling myself this isn’t forever, I don’t have to stay here if I don’t want to, etc. But changing jobs, even for more money, is a pain in the butt because you have a learning curve, you have to be super nice to everyone and you have to build relationships all over again. And you have to not give too much of your time and energy to people who may be taking advantage of you when you don’t have to report to them. It’s exhausting and endless and that’s why I’m happy to stay in this job where very little is required of me and I have no KPIs.

  • I’m really glad to see Gen Z no longer standing by those standards despite the backlash they face. The worst part is that we are still expected to have social life, hobbies, stay healthy and energetic and remain productive during our free time. This needs to stop, especially when there have been numerous studies showing that overworking is actually counterproductive to both companies and society. And it’s really wild to me that it’s become somewhat acceptable working a full time job won’t guarantee access to basic living necessities. Leadership and politics need to wake up on this issue.

  • There is no 9 to 5. That’s a myth. It’s at least 6:30 to 6:30, and it’s awful. Back in the 1990s, I started a business at home, because I realized that all you needed (at that time) was a computer, a modem, a printer, a fax machine, and a phone. Now, every morning, evening, late afternoon, I’m grateful that I did this. I love what I do, I’m not exploited, I decide my own salary, and I don’t have to deal with d***heads. Or an exhausting commute by subway. I thought people would jump on the opportunities this technology offered at the time and do the same thing. I’m still shocked that it took a pandemic for companies to catch on to the fact that a lot of corporate jobs can be done at home. But now they want employees to come back to them. If 85% of people in the US hate their jobs, that’s a lot more people than Gen Z comprises. Companies have been offering less and less to employees since the 1980s, and being a great employee doesn’t ensure anything now. Pensions turned into 401(k)s, good health insurance became crappy HMOs, and no law requiring maternity and paternity leave exists. We’re on our own.

  • I have to go back to work tomorrow. My managers chewed my ass out for me respecting myself enough not to let a customer treat me like his bitch. I also got in trouble for taking Mother’s Day off as my mother passed last month. I was so cheerful when I began working at this job and I work hard every day, but get treated like garbage. I’m living in my first apartment, I’ve been homeless, and I will place my self respect above being someone’s slave.

  • The standard of living has changed, A LOT. Most 9-5 workers (like myself, I work 10hrs a day 5 days a week) don’t have to worry about hunting/ shelter/ hot water/ heat. I think it’s a mindset tbh. I’m 23 idk what gen that makes me but I’m happy. I still manage to make time for family, cook, clean, gym, (it does help that I have a husband) but I think we’ve lost the power to find happiness and peace at any point in our lives. That’s something that no one can take away. Sorry for sounding hippie but that how i feel.

  • This doesn’t affect only younger people like Gen Z. Even us millennials are struggling paycheck to paycheck. Basically, unless you’ve worked in the same company for the last twenty years, and had all those raises, you’re in this situation of never having money for anything. Forget owning a house or condo, that’s a pipe dream at this point. Just paying rent, food and utilities, is all your 40 hours pay goes towards. Not to mention the hours spent on commute, which aren’t paid.

  • As a first gen college student with immigrant parents, that’s why I’m choosing a career that makes me happy, art in the animation industry, I may be in dept and it will be hard, but at least I’ll be happy, I see so many students my age choosing majors and careers to make their family happy, or what will makes the most money, which is fine, I’m happy that their pursuing a career and thinking about their future. Life is getting really harder and extremely expensive for the next generations, and it’s gonna keep getting harder and more expensive. At least I’m pursuing in something I’m good at and that makes me happy, getting paid to be creative seems like such a privilege, and I’m willing to pursue my dream even if I won’t be financially stable or independent. At least I’ll be creating artwork and being underpaid and overworked lol, just my thoughts.

  • people are taking jobs personally. A job’s main purpose is to fund your lifestyle outside of said job. if you’re not happy with your job, break up with it and move to another until you find something close to your “dream” job. If you’re working make sure to have the following in place. it makes breaking up with your job easier. 401k (Your Retirement) HSA/FSA (to protect you against medical bills if you lose a job) 6-month emergency fund ( so you can job hunt without desperation)

  • i first started working when i was 16 after having to leave brick & mortar school for the last 2 years of being sick in the hospital. i always told myself i would never smoke.. i would never drink… i would never do drugs.. boy was i wrong. and the fact that i wasn’t around anyone my age or had peers introduce these things to me i found them myself… started smoking and drinking as a teenager to cope with stress of going to school full time online while also holding a job where i was consistently bullied and repremanded for.. essentially being alive. the drugs came later with more dead end jobs. now i’m 22 and terrified to do anything above my pay grade or go back to school because i can barely handle what i do now. it saddens me. i was really smart and capable. i just need to find it again i guess.

  • I love my job, not what I do on it but my boss and colleagues are wonderful. I don’t make a lot of money so I send my income statement to the government so I can get social security. I work 20 hours a week because I am disabled and can’t work more than that. A lot of my life has been shit but when I got this job things started to look up.

  • The student loans thing is different. You promised to repay the loan, so you should. I wouldn’t be opposed to restructuring or partial forgiveness in some instances, but before we can do that we need to get the system under control and not let people borrow extreme amounts of money for degrees the market is not demanding.

  • I sell on Amazon no stability, confusing and very risky. I work like 4-5 hours a day and make maybe 10k a month. I think i can never go back to wage job. I have 3 degrees and if God wills I will invest my money wisely and never have to go to work. BTW people think im crazy. To start my business I had to borow 30k on credit cards, making 7.50 an hour

  • OK I know that they must be upset but as someone that does not work on Monday through Friday, 9 to 5 job. Anybody that has a set schedule is already doing better than me because they can plan things outside of work and not have to worry about having to cover a shift or not knowing what you’re going to work the next week. They have a certain number of hours and they know exactly how much they’re going to be paid each week. I would take that in a heart beat. Not to mention the benefits.

  • The fact that the girl in the intro (she’s really pretty by the way) said that she’s dealt with misogyny, discrimination, and being undervalued all because of the color of her skin speaks absolute VOLUMES about the job that she works at, had I been there and I saw them treat her like that I would’ve called them the fuck out IMMEDIATELY (especially if my friends dealt with work discrimination even no one should have to deal with that anyway) work discrimination against people of color and disgusting and disturbing and it makes fucking blood bubble and boil😡🤬,I hope that she found another job that actually respects her and does not discriminate her for who she is

  • 5:46 No there should not be student loan forgiveness. Im all for making college free. I am not in favor of forgiving existing loans. You may as why. The reason is simple: I graduated in 2019, I paid for college myself, and I graduated debt free. I was given the SAME choices everyone else gets. I made the uncommon choice to pay upfront which meant: 1) I went to state school despite getting into a prestigious private school. k-12 I busted my butt for perfect grades, graduated with 30 AP credits, got into a dream school… and ended up in the same place people who slacked off k-12 ended up. A sacrifice I was willing to make 2) I commuted 2 hours a day from home to school for 1.5 years. It was awful. But it kept school affordable. A sacrifice I was willing to make 3) I worked 2 full time jobs + being an RA (free room and board). There were no parties, clubs, or fun. A sacrifice I was willing to make 4) I majored in chemical engineering. It was hard & extremely unpleasant but had good earning potential. A sacrifice I was willing to make So yah, Im not supporting student loan forgiveness. We all had the same choices. I chose to make my sacrifices up front. Im not now going to pay the sacrifices of people who decided to delay those sacrifices. Unless I get a full reimbursement… y’all can pay those loans back

  • Lol. What gets me is the total disregard this generation has for the older generations that also felt the same way u feel about working. We HATED work and the whole idea of wasting our lives working. OMG! NO! THIS IS ALL THERE IS!?! Why do u think we could just accept it, but u, being the most special generation ever, is going to be the only generation to dislike work ever, but also figure out a way to never work, unlike us older generations. Good luck living in a society that when older generations die, u will live in a “mad max” world. Meaning u won’t work bc it’s pointless, but u will also not have any comforts bc no one is working. Remember, older generations also wanted instant gratification, and wanted a million $ pay check the day after graduating, yet we accepted toiling for decades in exchange for the fruits we are now enjoying now in our old age. So just shut it and give me a break.

  • Jeff bezos worked at 9 to 5 too. Instead of using his money to go clubbing, he put it toward starting amazon. Elon Musk came here from South Africa without anything except a dream. He, along with his brother, put their mind to work in build small businesses and sold them until he got to the point.He is now. Point is instead of partying every weekend start investing.What you make. You need to stop listening to what society tells you and try to follow your dreams and build it. And for god’s sake, stop thinking you have to split apart from your parents, right when you turn 18, again that’s society poisoning your mind. The fact is, people don’t give themselves enough time to build anything. They think they have to break out on their own, right? When they turn eighteen and end up suffering cause, they didn’t give themselves time to builf their wealth

  • What if you don’t hate the work itself, but just people at work? And like…almost everything about working for corporations? I just don’t understand why work has to suck as much as it does and why we’ve improved so many things about modern day living but most people still hate their jobs (and for great reasons).

  • I work as a paid live in caregiver and will be forced to provide life time care for a relative due to state law. I would jump at a chance to do even the most miserable retail job that paid half of my already measly salary, but no matter what job I work I’d either have to have 2 jobs or have room mates to afford even basic rent here. I work 12 to 20 hour days in a filthy, ioslating job with people who frankly hate me and most of my income is eaten up by supply costs and the management is hideously incompentent. I have no degree, no friends, no money, and no future. I can’t quit and I can’t move out. All I can reccomend is: don’t get stuck with your relatives when you’re an adult. Flee as fast you can and move the fuck out, even if you’re poor. When the caregiving crisis really boils over, you don’t want to be the one stuck with this job.

  • I’d like my job more if they would treat me like permanent staff and get rid of the on call positions all together- it’s just an excuse to pay us less and give us absolutely NO benefits. Living wage needs to be a thing for everyone, esp. the “low skill” jobs that evil mayor was talking about. Like everyone needs to eat and there’s so many hands on deck to make that happen- but no one needs the staff for corporations that’re producing useless, low quality garbage. Yet that seems to be where the money is. Smh it’s delusional and it breaks my heart how people (older generations esp.) look down on others that serve THEM.

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