Salsa has actually been the top selling condiment in the US for several years now. We're doing better than we think!Now to be fair, that would be an acceptable substitute.
Salsa has actually been the top selling condiment in the US for several years now. We're doing better than we think!
I am in a high-chaos, precarious industry (both my individual company and the industry as a whole). More than 95% of the people I started with at my current company about a decade ago are gone, most of them gone from the industry as a whole.I am absurdly blessed to be in a field/profession with a ton of job security, decent health insurance, and not much scumminess.
I don't know how people in less secure positions keep a semblance of calm at all when distress is roiling their firm or industry. I can't imagine suggesting to someone they just walk away from a job unless they aren't walking away from much, have so much they won't notice it being gone, or have a spouse bringing in lots of money and who also has the option of having healthcare. (Start looking, start planning, sure. But just walking away. Ack.)
I am absurdly blessed to be in a field/profession with a ton of job security, decent health insurance, and not much scumminess.
I don't know how people in less secure positions keep a semblance of calm at all when distress is roiling their firm or industry. I can't imagine suggesting to someone they just walk away from a job unless they aren't walking away from much, have so much they won't notice it being gone, or have a spouse bringing in lots of money and who also has the option of having healthcare. (Start looking, start planning, sure. But just walking away. Ack.)
I mean, I mostly agree.
Based on my life (and past experience only), I would say that the two times you are most free are when you have nothing, and you have a lot.
When you have nothing, screw 'em. What can they take away, right? Starting over is easy. I had to do that ... a lot.
On the other hand, when you have a lot (for various definitions of "a lot,") you have the confidence that you can keep on truckin' They don't want you? Screw 'em. You're not put out, and besides, someone else will step up to the plate.
It's when you're in the middle ... when you have a family, and a mortgage, and you need that paycheck. That's when they have you. That's when those sleepless nights accumulate, and you're there, wide-eyed at chas volka, thinking about all the rumors of layoff and turmoil.
And that's a hell you don't wish on anyone.
I work for a retail corporation and have survived a number of bad economy layoffs. I have so much vacay and years into the place now that if they did lay me off (God forbid) I would have 6 months of severance (at least) coming so it would help me between things. It makes some of these turbulent times easier to take.I am absurdly blessed to be in a field/profession with a ton of job security, decent health insurance, and not much scumminess.
I don't know how people in less secure positions keep a semblance of calm at all when distress is roiling their firm or industry. I can't imagine suggesting to someone they just walk away from a job unless they aren't walking away from much, have so much they won't notice it being gone, or have a spouse bringing in lots of money and who also has the option of having healthcare. (Start looking, start planning, sure. But just walking away. Ack.)