this post was submitted on 05 Apr 2025
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I've just finished my first week at a new job. I like the job, but it's the first time in several years that I've had relatively standard 8 hours a day, 5 days a week as my schedule. The last time I did was in 2019 or so, and then I went and got back into graduate school for the interim.

Now that I'm back to standard hours, the commitment of time and energy seems to be quite a lot, more than I remember from prior ft experience(It could well be that this job is actually mentally demanding, whereas my prior full-time job was pretty brainless) and I'm not sure how I will make room in my life for anything else.

I like the job I'm doing, and I don't feel as if I'm being unreasonably pressured at work (Boss even said to go out of our way not to work overtime, and it's a salaried position so I know they're not trying to skimp on hourly pay), so I guess I'm mainly wanting to ask how the rest of you full-timers do it.

And does it get easier to manage as you start to get used to it and make a routine?

Maybe it feels like quite a basic or rudimentary to ask... But these are things I've forgotten in the interim since last working 40-hour weeks.

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[โ€“] Flemmy@lemm.ee 4 points 1 day ago (2 children)

I'm 15 years in paper office space and already having a bad neck how can older gens stick to a same spot for so long.

For me, it was my hips. I really do think sitting for long periods in front of a computer is really bad for your health. Good luck to you. Get lots of exercise and take as many breaks as you can get away with.

[โ€“] iii@mander.xyz 1 points 1 day ago (2 children)

You don't have to do the same job the whole time?

[โ€“] Flemmy@lemm.ee 3 points 1 day ago

No true I did change but in this business culture, especially family run there's a core culture loyal to the company. Coming in as a job-hopper implies you're a temp help. Even though everything is on friendly terms, the smoke break spot is the spot for gossip. :-D

The whole work from home drama during and after COVID regulations shown how many people actually dread the fulltime office space on a long term.

I still remember my first managers' sons swimming lesson updates and skiing in the Alps slides like a trigger memory when I recognize the striped pastel blue blouse tucked in formal loose pants.

I was an engineer. I worked with four different companies, but the work was substantially the same, working in front of a computer.