• @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    3024 days ago

    Get up at 6. Work will 6. 1hr to make dinner. 2 hrs awake with wife. Go to bed at 9. Wake up at 530 and cry for 30 min.

    Rerpeat adinfinium until i finally die. This is no way to live.

    • @ameancow
      link
      12
      edit-2
      24 days ago

      This is no way to live.

      I wonder what would happen if everyone who felt this way all at once just decided to stop. All at once, everyone turns around and goes home. How many people would it be? Half? 3/4? Most of them?

      We almost got to experience a change when Covid hit, the only bright spot, but it was soon eclipsed by corporate buzzwords and inspirational music montages on powerpoint telling us how happy we are to return to offices and ten hours of driving and 1/8 of our paycheck on gas every goddamn week so we can sit in a visible place while we waste time reading emails that don’t pertain to us and attending meetings about initiatives that are meant only to make the shareholders think we’re doing something.

      Shareholders who attend the meetings via Zoom at that.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      -1
      edit-2
      24 days ago

      If you move out to the country you can retire in a very comfortable air conditioned tent on a fully self-sufficient one-acre farm for like $8k, and that includes the cost of the land.

      You could afford to work part time remotely and still live a life of luxury compared to our ancestors.

      Why are you working for hours every day just to give all that money to some landlord? Move off-grid and enjoy your life. If more people did that, the supply of work would decrease and unions could negotiate for higher pay for less hours.

      • @ameancow
        link
        724 days ago

        I’m working towards just this, not a tent necessarily but a very small house/shack, gonna get some dogs and chickens and probably work at a local grocery or do art until I die.

        I am not making much progress. I wonder who tf is buying houses.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          0
          edit-2
          22 days ago

          I’m working towards just this, not a tent necessarily but a very small house/shack

          Nice, good luck! My uncle lives in a tiny home out in the boonies, and seems to enjoy it. He grows beans and sells fridge magnets on Etsy.

          You could buy a place like this in full, with some solar panels, a bed, and mini-fridge after two years and some change working minimum wage. It’s not glamorous at all but it’s a chill af way to live life away from all the stress.

          I wonder who tf is buying houses.

          I know it’s a rhetorical question, but 50% of millennials own a home in the US, mostly in small rural areas and suburbs.

          Both capitalists and tankies want you to believe that you have to work until you die, but it’s just not true. Don’t give in to the doomers!

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        724 days ago

        You could afford to work part time remotely

        If you’re a professional that even has that option. Factory workers and blue collar schmucks like myself are chained to a radius around available work :(

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          1
          edit-2
          22 days ago

          The point is to avoid work. Just live off the land and enjoy your life. You can sell fridge magnets on Etsy like my uncle.

      • @nomous
        link
        324 days ago

        Find me land for $8k within reasonable distance of an area with tech jobs please.

          • @nomous
            link
            1
            edit-2
            22 days ago

            The point is to work less not avoid work completely. I’m unable to work 100% remotely for the time being, rural internet is still a joke most places.

            I’m just saying it’s not so simple and still requires an incredible amount of work, saving, and sacrifice to “just retire to an acre and get some chickens.”