Healthy vs unhealthy work ethic.
Posted by richrobinson 9 years, 4 months ago to The Gulch: General
I have been working since I was a kid. My parents instilled in me a belief that if I worked hard and saved that everything would work out. While my wife and I enjoy a nice lifestyle I have already worked more years than most government employees need to retire. Due to downturns in the economy over the years and some bad investments on my part I am no where near retirement. In my neighborhood I see people who make a lot more than I do and work a lot less. I am wondering if my work ethic is misguided or unhealthy. As a retailer I am working 7 days a week during the Christmas season at an average of about 65 hours a week. Dagny and Hank worked long, hard hours and benefited financially from their labors. Eddie Willers worked long, hard hours but probably made a fraction of what Dagny did. Eddie continued to work even after Dagny knew all was lost. Did he have an unhealthy work ethic? Do I?
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I imagine old Nat Taggart - spinning in his grave under the lower level track switch multiplex in tunnel 3 of the Taggart Transcontinental building - at the disaster his son not only was, but was to become... Especially when compared to the resounding success his daughter was.
While people joke about it being a "shrug job", I am a civil servant, doing amazing things and working my butt off 60+ hours a week, have 2 pretty labor and time intensive hobbies, and am returning to school next month. Yet I see people who make twice what I do that are clockwatchers, slackers, and moochers. But I don't compare myself to them - one, I love my job and I love work, so I feel that in a real sense is one of the rewards for my hard work... Two, I can look at myself in the mirror in the morning without wincing! But comparing what I do - and my life - to what someone else does does is a no-sum game - the only person I have to satisfy that I am producing at the top of my game is myself. If I did it for another - then I would be the most miserable sort of person...
I would argue that you really cannot reach an answer to your question unless you have an external standard giving you the purpose of work in the first place. If we search without an absolute guide, is the search only over when we feel content? If contentment is the goal, then many other factors have to be considered. You will never reach the answer without an external, extra-anthropic standard defining the reason for work.
Same here; except I will be able to retire before too long by cashing in my assets. If the idiots in Washington D.C. had not pulled the rug from under the economy I could have retired already. I worked so many hours during the creation of my company that I can now just work a regular schedule and since they have made it less profitable over time I refuse to work harder and feed the beast that stole my future and rewarded the indolent. So now I will eventually retire comfortably but not rich... Fortunately my desires have changed and a simple life looks more appealing than it once did.
Now, if the government would get out of my way I would like to ride the economic upswing one last time. When things are good I have much more incentive. I like to be productive and make things. I make things for the military which I cannot disclose. Many have saved many American lives, but I will not be properly compensated. By the way, anyone working for the government as a vendor can usually tell you they are among the slowest and worst to collect from, but Galt help you if you owe them money. They will just take it from your bank account promptly.
You have a great work ethic and values. It is the government roadblocks that have diminished your rewards. In the name of equality they want us all to be equally poor and dependent on them. After all "you didn't build that." All your investment and those hours were/are imaginary... right?
Regards,
O.A.
You are a perfect example of someone lucky enough to have thinking parents conveying their values to you in a manner strong enough to ward off the school system's attempts to perform a reasonectomy on your brain. Had the schools succeeded, you would have been certain that you were owed a living provided by the government.
Joe