47songs 47songs

Do you like going into work every day?

Do you like going into work every day?

Do you relish getting up every day to meet a new challenge at work? Come in contact with good people?

Or is work a drag? A pain in the...? A heartache? A twisted nightmare? Boring?

Today, my second day back teaching preschool after a wonderful summer vacation, I was kicked, spit at, dealt with a screaming ear piercing temper tantrum, a child who cried the entire time she was there, one who gagged as if to vomit because she was crying so hard, and two children who wet their pants. And yet, I wouldn't give up my job for any other on the face of the earth! I absolutely adore it! Because I know that after a couple more times back at school, these children will come to trust us (the teachers) and the environment we provide for them. And I'll spend the rest of the year as if I'm in the middle of a season long series of Art Linkletter's, "Children Say the Darndest Things."

How about you? Do you like going into work everyday?
13,580 views 37 replies
Reply #26 Top
don't work...so...no i don't mind getting up every morning!!!! But i'm a student at the university.



You don't have 'homework' Cyberworld?
Reply #27 Top
Thanks Ms Blindbatty, I fished a bit between Crystal River and Cedar Key a few years back. It's a pretty good place to fish.
I grew up about 10 miles from the Mosquito Lagoon, South of Daytona Beach and North of the Cape Canaveral. Fishins' pretty good here too.

Getting back on topic....I bagged groceries and stocked shelves at one of the larger chains here back in the 70's while I was in high school. I remember how much I disliked the job at the time, but as I got older I realized how nice it was to work 8-10 hours and leave and not think about work until I had to show up for the next 8-10 hour shift. Once you have a "career" you seem to take work home, either mentally or actually. It seems like I forgot how to disconnect at some point. I guess that's why I fish. It's the only time I feel disconnected anymore.
Reply #28 Top
How's the fishin' there Wreckless?


Hehe.. one word, ...Excellent!

Great barrier reef area maybe?


Right on the money there... Cairns to be precise.
Reply #29 Top
Spent some time in Australia while I was in the Navy (US) around 1980. Sadly I only got to spend 3 or 4 days up north while I was there and didn't fish at all. I was busy enjoying dry land for a change. It reminded me a lot of home, very similar climate but a difference in plants.
Reply #30 Top
It's the only time I feel disconnected anymore.



Disconnecting, when it's time to disconnect, is extremely neccessary for our own well being, Lantec. This is the first summer it took me almost the full time off to come to terms with a very emotional year I had teaching. For one thing, one of my children was a 3 year old boy with an inoperable brain tumor. I watched his health deteriorate before me in those last nine months, to the point where he couldn't even finish out the last week of school. For me, this past summer was a time for reflecting. Reflecting about how lucky I am to have two healthy children, a wonderful marriage, and an incredible job that allows me to meet and work with such exceptional children.
Reply #31 Top

was kicked, spit at, dealt with a screaming ear piercing temper tantrum, a child who cried the entire time she was there, one who gagged as if to vomit because she was crying so hard, and two children who wet their pants.

Oh....that's just a typical day, here at Wincustomize....

Reply #32 Top
Oh....that's just a typical day, here at Wincustomize....


Hey, I resemble that remark
Reply #33 Top

My 'real' work has morphed over the past 30 years....used to be 'creative', now it's 'conciliatory'.  An Architect no longer designs FOR a client...he designs AGAINST beaurocratic discrimination.

Do I like it?

Would you like to be continuously brown-nosing to the Planners and Councillors that are in your way?

Is it the satisfaction of having a client happy with a design or is it of getting the better of some arsehole hell-bent on vindictive obstruction?

Architecture is [now] a mug's game....and I'm your resident mug.

Reply #34 Top
Is it the satisfaction of having a client happy with a design or is it of getting the better of some arsehole hell-bent on vindictive obstruction?

It's the finished product now. You have to be able to take something from that. Once all the inspections are over, the CO is about to be issued and the property ready for people. That's when I show up to just kinda "take it all in"



Reflecting about how lucky I am to have two healthy children, a wonderful marriage, and an incredible job that allows me to meet and work with such exceptional children.

Yes.
Reply #35 Top
Yes. I really like my job. It's the upper management that usually brings it all down.
Reply #36 Top
Well... yeah actually. I miss it when i don't go. I'll admit that I still don;t like what I do (unload boxes out of a truck) but the possibilities are endless... seriously they are. They have lots of programs for education and moving up in levels.

Plus I get allot of repeated muscle movement.
Reply #37 Top
Depends on what mood I am in and whether it's busy or not.