* * * * * “Rise up! Your employer is stealing your life!” > It was during the years of office work that I caught on: I got two weeks' > paid vacation per year. A year has 52 weeks. Even a comparatively > unskilled, uneducated worker like me, who couldn't (still can't) do > fractions or long division—even I had enough math to figure that two goes > into 52 … how many times? Twenty-sic. [sic] Meaning it would take me 26 > years on the job to accumulate one year for myself. And I could only have > that in 26 pieces, so it wouldn't even feel like a year. In other words, no > time was truly mine. My boss merely allowed me an illusion of freedom, a > little space in which to catch my breath, in between the 50 weeks that I > lived that he owned. My employer uses 26 years of my life for every year I > get to keep. And what do I get in return for this enormous thing I am > giving? What do I get in return for my life? > > A paycheck that's as skimpy as they can get away with. If I'm lucky, some > health insurance. (If I'm really lucky, the employer's definition of > “health” will include my teeth and my eyes—maybe even my mind.) And, in a > truly enlightened workplace, just enough pension or “profit-sharing” to > keep me sweet but not enough to make life different. And that's it. > Amen! Now, only if my ex-boss [1] would get this message. Or perhaps not—he may want to work himself to death serving his corporate masters. Nothing like dying at work to show dedication, eh? [1] gopher://gopher.conman.org/0Phlog:2002/01/10.1 Email Sean Conner at sean@conman.org .