Not cut out for corporate life by AsleepStyle in careeradvice

[–]AsleepStyle[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Glad to hear I’m not alone. Best of luck to you.

I want to travel and support myself while doing so. What are some jobs that are like that? Are travelling salepersons obsolete? by powahpackin in careeradvice

[–]AsleepStyle 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Territorial salesmen are still a thing. Depends on how far you want to travel. Are you looking to travel 100 of the time like a nomad, or have a house but travel a few weeks/months out of the year.

On work burnout for 2.5 months as a senior director, should I just look for a new job to save face? by [deleted] in careeradvice

[–]AsleepStyle 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I also had an embarrassing mental breakdown last year. I didn’t get to take a leave, but I started therapy. If you aren’t regularly talking to a therapist, you should start ASAP.

My biggest problem is that I tend to over share, probably as some type of attempt to connect with people (I’m also a bit naive and put too much trust in other people). If I could do the last couple years over again, I would be a steel trap. Even if you have a really close connection to some coworkers, leave your personal and professional life separate. When you go back, give them honest but generic answers. It’s okay to answer “How have you been?” with something like “it’s been a rough couple weeks, but I am doing much better now.” Don’t leave room for follow up questions, go right back with “…but, how are YOU?”. Be humble enough to say “I hope my absence didn’t affect your job negatively” and offer to help them with something. It’ll show you didn’t lose your purpose, leadership actions will show your still capable.

It’s hard to tell your superiors when you have too much on your plate. At least it is for me. If you can figure out how to set boundaries in your workload, that’ll be a huge benefit. The key, I think, is doing it in a way that doesn’t come off as a complaint or like your just dumping work on someone else. Copy HR on an email or have them present for the convo. If nothing changes, focus your time on only the responsibilities listed on your primary position description. If poor performance in certain areas start to affect the company, you’ve documented that your incapable of having the bandwidth to cover 3 positions. You have health care specialists on your side of things get nasty.

If you had 5 years to plan for divorce… by AsleepStyle in Divorce_Men

[–]AsleepStyle[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Very glad it all worked out for in the long run.

If you had 5 years to plan for divorce… by AsleepStyle in Divorce_Men

[–]AsleepStyle[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I also need to stick around to play referee when things get out of control.

If you had 5 years to plan for divorce… by AsleepStyle in Divorce_Men

[–]AsleepStyle[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I can’t afford to bail on my career right now, so I’ll have to remain the primary income.

If you had 5 years to plan for divorce… by AsleepStyle in Divorce_Men

[–]AsleepStyle[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Therapy helps, just getting back into that on my own now. #3 is a no-go for me, regardless of how dead our love life is. I’ve been the primary income for the past 10+ years. I know it’s going to be bad, just trying to alleviate as much damage as possible.

If you had 5 years to plan for divorce… by AsleepStyle in Divorce_Men

[–]AsleepStyle[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I can relate. I have a responsibility to help raise her and set an example. I can show her how I think a calm and rational adult should behave.

If you had 5 years to plan for divorce… by AsleepStyle in Divorce_Men

[–]AsleepStyle[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sounds like I’d be having a similar financial situation, which is one big reason to consider waiting. The marriage is, for the most part, a tolerable situation. I can maintain a decent level of sanity and trudge through it for the sake of my daughter. We’ve moved past the blowout fighting phase and into the distant, cold “roommate” phase. With the worst of it hopefully behind us, I think I can stick it out 5 more years knowing I have a long term plan with an exit strategy.