So yeah title says it all, currently around 8 months into a new hospital position and I’ve been extending my feelers out and doing job apps and got back invites to the start of preliminary interviews for some other jobs (mainly cuss there is likely going to be no significant pay raises for all us new hires until 2 years out so fuck that).

Bring this up to parents though and they have the weirdest attitude as though I’m betraying my company as well as shooting myself in the foot even though if I got some of these positions I’m interviewing for I’d see a huge pay bump and really good benefits (one of them is a state gig and has a damned good pension plan with only 5 years to be vested fully).

you’re laughing. You betrayed your company and you’re laughing

permalink
report
reply

The “Old Boys Club” isn’t a profit maximizing decision so we don’t do it anymore.

permalink
report
reply
1 point
*

I live in Japan, and it’s insane here. I get judged both for changing jobs and spending too much time in deadend ESL jobs with no hope of a promotion. I once got caught off-guard at an interview because it was my first one in 2 years and I’d forgotten that they’d want a reason for why I left a job more than 15 years ago.

permalink
report
reply

That’s fucking insane, 15 years I’d be hard pressed to remember anything really

permalink
report
parent
reply
1 point

Boomers are insufferable when it comes to basically anything involving employment.

I’m gonna rant.

Their misplaced loyalty or what I would call “cuckholdery” to their employers is… pathetic. Every employee creates some amount of surplus value which their employer syphons off and calls profit. This is the fundamentals of everything. To he grateful or whatever to the person who steals from you day after day is… well, it’s cuckholdery. No better word for it, imo.

During “their day,” most of them are now retired or nearing retirement very soon, (I’m assuming we are discussing actual boomers ie people in that broad generation from like 1945-1965 or whatever) you could feasibly get a job in 1970, work for 30 or 40 years and retire in 2000 or 2010 with a decent pension. They see staying at a job for decades as normal because it was for them, and maybe it could be normal, but capitalists have made it not the case.

I also generally hate that people in their 60s+ have apparently no fucking concept of inflation and wages and the fact that they have not kept up at all. I’ve legit heard so many boomers and gen Xers whine, in earnest, about “kids demanding $15/hr!” and how ridiculous it is. It’s like, bro. If you make $15/hr almost anywhere in the country, you have to work full time and split bills with someone else to kinda sorta make it and live anything close to a normal life. Like a life where you can afford a week or two off a year to travel somewhere or buy a new phone every couple years or eat out a few times a month. Not exactly luxuries, but boomers act like if you have a cell phone you should stfu and be grateful. As if mobile phones didn’t become essentially mandatory in the last decade. At least the ability to receive calls and texts. You can go without, but again, achieving “normal” is the minimum, imo. And normal at this point means having a phone. Sorry, boomers!

And speaking of inflation, they have no idea how much housing costs relative to wages. Sorry, it Uncle Bob, it isn’t 1967 anymore and houses aren’t $20000 when you make $10000 a year. I’m exaggerating? Google it. MFers could fully pay off a HOUSE in maybe 10 years. That’s crazy. That’s insane. That’s probably how “it should be” if a country insists on treating housing as a commodity. Instead they slowly stretched prices up to force 30 year mortgages and that’s the norm for a few decades now.

Btw, job resumes are bullshit. People don’t think about them much because it seems common sense. They kinda are, but the bullshit part isn’t having your contact info and a few job titles you held in the past. That’s basically fine. Even putting numbers for coworkers or ex-bosses is probably fine to verify people did something. The problem is… the whole “other shit” part of it. How it needs to be formatted in way to tingle the brain of a moron in HR (not sorry HR people- you know what you are. I rip my brother’s HR ass all the time). How people “care” or it’s considered “bad” to take a year off or even years off. Like how you have to explain that. W H Y? Why does any human get to ask and why does anyone have to feel compelled to answer that question? “Because this system sucks donkey cocks and I took a year to chill at my parents and paid them by cutting the grass and cleaning up dog shit. Why the fuck do you care, you’re gonna make as much off me whether I slaved away for that year or not.”

Resumes are absolutely the result of petty-tyrants in HR having far too much influence and I don’t give a shit what anyone says.

Fuck this shit.

permalink
report
reply

🔥

permalink
report
parent
reply

not sorry HR people- you know what you are.

office cops, ACAB includes HR

permalink
report
parent
reply
0 points

I honestly believe the “not knowing how much housing costs” thing is the worst boomer trait of them all. Anyone can look up house prices at any time, there’s no excuse for thinking that you can get affordable housing because “I did when I was your age” or whatever bullshit.

permalink
report
parent
reply
1 point

It doesn’t help. I had countless arguments with boomers telling me I need to buy somewhere because renting is wasted money. (Omg really? Here I was giving a landlord the best part of a grand a month for a mouldy room in a house made of cardboard because I love the freedom of it. (Idk about that last part but apparently some people see renting as choosing to be free. As if you aren’t contractually bound to pay the landlord for the term whether you stay or leave, but I digress.))

Then I would tell them the house prices and they would say, well that’s affordable, what’s the problem? The problem, mf, is that it seems affordable to you because you already own a fucking house worth the same amount so you are just imagining swapping one house for another rather than trying to buy one with not only zero monies in the bank but negative tens of thousands against your credit score, not to mention that your house might be worth an eye watering amount today but you bought it when they gave them away in raffles.

Feels good to get that off my chest, thanks.

permalink
report
parent
reply

And that’s exactly why I think it’s the worst boomer trait. Some things are hard to compare between now and then, but every form of housing is so vastly more expensive by any measure that to argue otherwise is psychotic. And yet.

permalink
report
parent
reply

one of my boomer relatives always said the best time to start looking for a new job is right after you got hired

permalink
report
reply

A rare example of a boomer being based and not trapped in their shit mentality

permalink
report
parent
reply

We love our good boomers folks

permalink
report
parent
reply

chat

!chat@hexbear.net

Create post

Chat is a text only community for casual conversation, please keep shitposting to the absolute minimum. This is intended to be a separate space from c/chapotraphouse or the daily megathread. Chat does this by being a long-form community where topics will remain from day to day unlike the megathread, and it is distinct from c/chapotraphouse in that we ask you to engage in this community in a genuine way. Please keep shitposting, bits, and irony to a minimum.

As with all communities posts need to abide by the code of conduct, additionally moderators will remove any posts or comments deemed to be inappropriate.

Thank you and happy chatting!

Community stats

  • 1.6K

    Monthly active users

  • 1.6K

    Posts

  • 19K

    Comments