I guest lower level people can't get sick?
Or maybe if they die, they're easier to replace?
'Lineage'
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
I guest lower level people can't get sick?
Or maybe if they die, they're easier to replace?
I couldn't tell you how many sick days we have. I think it's more honored in the breach. But I've never heard of sick days that carry over - I thought they were generally a use or lose proposition.
In dog news, I had a note from the new dog walker last night after his second visit saying that he still can't believe how well behaved Lucy is, especially compared to some of the other dogs he sees. I'm just ridiculously pleased by this.
I've read some of Chalker's books. I can't remember them real well though.
In work news that continues to make me laugh. The memo I drafted to clear up this mistake/non mistake whatever decision by my boss was 5 lines long. 3 sentences. I have just been told, but have not seen, that his re-write is 4 paragraphs long. It is so far out of my hands now I don't even have to type it up.
ALso? How is it only 1:40? It feels at least like 3!
ALso? How is it only 1:40? It feels at least like 3!
I KNOW! I haven't even eaten lunch, yet. My tummy is grumbly.
10 days of vacation a year, no sick days. With perfect attendance I can earn one more vacation day every four months.
On a noneconomic note, would we still like to watch gymnastics if we could see them in freeze frame?
So she sells fruit in the market, cleans floors, and takes in laundry. This is your lottery winner? He's a gardener, a manual labourer for hire, and he paints houses when he gets a chance.
I think part of the reason for our different perception is that I think of "jobs" as formal employment with income tax withholding and stuff. So I know people who set out a blanket in the market or paint houses in exchange for medical care are working hard, but I don't think of them as having multiple jobs, American-style. Maybe that explains the different perception.
There is no welfare or medicaid or pension or other form of government money to help the family keep their heads above water.
That would tend to make you appreciate the third job more, considering how bad things would be if you didn't have it. Hmm... I just ran into a contradiction. American's hours worked declined the richer the country got -- we used to work 10-12, six days a week like they do in China today. That doesn't make us seem especially hardworking.
What if your husband disappeared, cleaning out the checking account and leaving you $150K in debt, your kid needs braces and you have no dental insurance, one of your jobs is solely to pay for the daycare you need to pay for so you can work the other two, and so, you barely see your own children? What if the other two jobs will only put you in at 32 hours a week so they don't have to give you any benefits?
That's the bad sense of uniquely American -- I don't think they do credit card debt or braces in Malawi. I would hope this person could file for bankruptcy. It's in the third world, where your options could be work three jobs or starve, that winning the third job in the lottery could be crucial.
Curt Schilling donates bloody sock to Hall of Fame: [link]
I work for myself. You could look at it one way and say I get all the vacation I want, or you could look at it the other way and say I don't ever get any. But that's an issue with working hours, too, so not unique. I should be off right now, because we finished up our workweek yesterday, but I'm so far behind I'll be at the desk all weekend.
I guess it's just exempt hours. No overtime pay.
I just ate some noodles, but I'm still hungry, so I want more.
Also, I want to go on vacation. Maybe Moab again. And I want to go visit Page, AZ next weekend, because it came up on both the SO's & my Findyourspots.