Interpret ‘hardest’ however suits you. Look forward to your answers!

  • Moonguide@lemmy.ml
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    6 months ago

    Hard work does not always lead to success. Most of the time, it just leads to more work.

        • thejoker954@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          At my current job, people keep remarking how fast I unload a truck.

          I just laugh to myself. I’m not fast - I just work at a steady pace and utilize efficient methods.

          I know and have know plenty of people that can move faster than me but its almost always at the expense of their quality.

          I just see no reason to be ‘the fastest gun in the west’ if you can’t hit the broadside of a barn.

          • NoIWontPickAName@kbin.earth
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            6 months ago

            Same but loading instead.

            I was just thinking today about how I keep bitching in my head about the number, and then realize I run it all day no problem.

            Just gotta hit that flow.

            The fact that it’s hot probably helps as well, the inside of a trailer gets hot even with 2’ diameter fans, you have to learn to be efficient.

            I’m so glad I started over winter, it gave me plenty of time to start to figure out timing and pacing.

            Plus y’know the unreal amount of money it pays for work that isn’t even that hard once you’ve built the muscles.

            • KevonLooney@lemm.ee
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              6 months ago

              Plus y’know the unreal amount of money it pays for work that isn’t even that hard once you’ve built the muscles.

              Don’t sell yourself short. Pay isn’t about how hard your work is. It’s about how much money the company makes off of you and how quickly they can replace you.

              This was obvious during the pandemic when all the “low skill” jobs hiked their wages. It turned out most office jobs were not as important as retail work, so lots of people in retail got raises for the same work.

        • ClassifiedPancake@discuss.tchncs.de
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          6 months ago

          I had a different direction in mind actually. My experience is that if I work fast (or rather faster than the slow colleagues) while delivering good work, I just get more work from my boss because I have time. If I slow down so everyone is at the same pace, I have less work in the end. This is why I think a fixed 40 hour work week is shit. Let me go if I’m done with my tasks.

  • ShaggySnacks@lemmy.myserv.one
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    6 months ago

    It is possible to commit no mistakes and still lose. That is not a weakness; that is life.

    Captain Jean-Luc Picard

    You can do everything right and still lose, still face heart break, and still face setbacks.

    • EveryMuffinIsNowEncrypted@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      6 months ago

      To this day, that is one of my favorite fictional quotes of all time. It’s something that for years every now and again I have to remind myself of, since our modern world focuses so extremely on success in all ways at all costs.

      It’s kinda scary actually…

  • bazus1@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    conflict-avoidance often leads to lying, and lying will lead to greater conflict. The truth will set you free.

  • cygnus@lemmy.ca
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    6 months ago

    HR doesn’t work for you and is never on your side. They exist to cover your employer’s ass.

    • Chef_Boyardee@lemm.ee
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      6 months ago

      Reminds me of a quote from a Reddit comment years ago:

      “Sometimes we lack the strength to communicate, and we whisper what we need to shout.”

      • MeetInPotatoes@lemmy.ml
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        6 months ago

        Yeah, that hits in the feels too. In my case there have been two big ones. I wish I would’ve told the girl that got away that I just got jealous and it was my fault I pushed her away…that I forgave her or more realistically that she did nothing wrong. I was young and dumb. The other was what I didn’t say to my stepson, that I wasn’t ever going to try to be the “new sheriff in town” and that life is hard and he was fine just the way he was. Maybe that yesterday’s painful lessons become tomorrow’s triumphs. He was an angsty, antisocial teen and I always figured he’d be cooler towards me when he grew up a bit. He killed himself, so growing up never happened.

  • AnarchistArtificer@slrpnk.net
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    6 months ago

    That there is no silver bullet, no quick fix, no “Eureka” moments that happen without work. “Progress” is less an exciting event, more a rhythm made by the repeated struggling against entropy; when you’re doing it well, you’ll come to hardly notice its beat until one day you look around and everything’s different.

    You’d think that recognising this progress might be motivating, but it’s often demoralising because it demonstrates how unglamorous the work of self-improvement is. You hardly get time to enjoy your achievements, because as you grow, you become aware of how much more there is to do; the burdens on one’s time and energy tend to expand as our personal capacities do, so even if one makes incredible progress it can feel like you haven’t moved at all — in both your “before” and “after” snapshots, it can feel like you’re still barely staying afloat in life, even if objectively, you have massively improved your coping skills.

    And the worst part of it all is knowing that it’s okay to be feeling like this. You’re tired because it’s a lot of work, and you’re demoralised because the work doesn’t end. You’re not the only one who has the stake in your life and your wellbeing, and as you grow, this will be underscored by a greater sense of duty towards the systems and people that depend on you; When I was young and very depressed, I stayed alive for my family and I resented the fact that they cared about me because it bound me to life. (Un)fortunately(?), over the years, my attempts to stick around to avoid hurting the people I care about has led to a bunch more people being invested in my wellbeing and I ended up loving those people too. How privileged I am to have such wonderful people in my life, who give me hope for the world and embolden me to keep fighting. And yet, I resent these people too. I have to allow myself that, at least a little bit, otherwise I’d collapse under the pressure of a duty to a world so much larger than I am. The worst part of it all is that I wouldn’t have it any other way.

    So here I am, still plodding along, despite everything, hoping to make my existence a tiny little monument to resistance, as I stubbornly push back against all-consuming entropic decay. I know that in the grand scheme of things, nothing I, as an individual, does will matter, nor will it last, but I don’t care. Well, I do care — the enormity of it threatens to swallow me whole — but I don’t care that I care, because what difference does it make? The hardest lesson I’ve learned is that everyone feels this way, to an extent, and I’m nothing special. In that truth is terror, but also the comfort of solidarity. I may be scared and exhausted, but I know I’m not alone in this. For better or for worse, my life isn’t just for me.

  • gerryflap@feddit.nl
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    6 months ago

    You can’t just pretend that you’re “driven by logic” and ignore your “weak” emotions forever. If the foundations upon which you build your personality are rotten, there will be point where it all comes crashing down. Until that moment you just waste time pretending to be someone you aren’t.

    • cRazi_man@lemm.ee
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      6 months ago

      This is something commonly misunderstood as:

      Logic = correct = good

      Emotion = irrational = bad

      In truth your emotions are trying to tell you something. You certainly shouldn’t be acting completely on emotion. But you do need to learn to interpret what your emotions are telling you and what that means, because there is critical information there that you would ignore at your peril.

      • gerryflap@feddit.nl
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        6 months ago

        Exactly. I think it’s easy for autistic people like me to fall into this mindset. When I was younger I was quite disillusioned with the world, mostly because I didn’t fully fit in. Feeling like I was in some way better, because I was driven by logic instead of emotion, was probably a defense mechanism or something. In truth it was not that I didn’t have emotions, I just wasn’t able to listen to them. Luckily I never really got into the far right “facts don’t care about your feelings” bullshit.

  • dotslashme@infosec.pub
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    6 months ago

    Don’t argue with idiots!

    As Mark Twain said:

    “Never argue with an idiot. They will drag you down to their level and beat you with experience.”

    • cRazi_man@lemm.ee
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      6 months ago

      I agree with the principle, but not in the same way.

      It feels good to portray another person as an “idiot” or obviously wrong. Feels superior and legitimate.

      The lesson for me has been: people are allowed to have their own thoughts and opinions, no matter how ill-informed I think they are. It is going to be just as difficult to force them to believe my opinion, as it would be for me to believe their position. So shouting “facts” and “logic” doesn’t work at all. If you can get over branding someone an idiot you might be able to listen to why they actually believe such misguided information, but this would take non-judgemental questioning.

      So I agree: stop arguing with people.

      You cannot make people change their minds in a single sitting. You should aim to be less closed minded than they are. Stop thinking of others as “idiots” to begin with.

      If you’re really interested in diving into this, here’s the first of a 3 part series talking about how to have difficult conversations with people who see the world differently, how to have better debates about contentious issues, and how to ethically and scientifically persuade one another about things that matter – in short, this is a three-part series about How Minds Change.

      https://youarenotsosmart.com/2023/03/06/yanss-254-how-to-have-productive-conversations-in-a-polarized-political-environment/

      (I’m not affiliated with the podcast or this guy’s books…I just listen to a lot of cognitive science podcasts)

  • Annoyed_🦀 @monyet.cc
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    6 months ago

    Interpret ‘hardest’ however suits you

    I’ll just scope it down to yesterday. I intentionally short-circuited a 36v battery to see if the battery is still functional or not because my multimeter is out of power. I did this intentionally or otherwise usually in 12v environment to either test out quickly if the wire is connected, or when i accidentally shorted the terminal. The spark are weak on 12v so no big deal with 36v right?

    It’s the brightest spark i’ve ever witnessed in a semi-controlled environment, second to welding spark, and it leave a blind spot in my vision for about 10 second. The terminal melted a bit, and the wire bit that touched the terminal disintegrated. Also almost start a house fire with that.

    Note to self: wait until you get your equipment in working condition before you work with electric.

      • Annoyed_🦀 @monyet.cc
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        6 months ago

        Only on an old car to test if the stray wire connected to positive or not, or on a disconnected battery to see if the battery is strong enough for bench testing something, or to demonstrate what happen if you touch two jumper cable together while it connected to the battery.