Fleinsuppe t1_jcjysra wrote
As a nursing student having experienced the hospital environment, the guilt of using breaks is palpable. Partly because urgent patient care needs are unpredictable, but mostly because you leave your patients with coworkers who now have double responsibility. There is also the anxiety of not finishing the workload before end of shift.
Revenge_of_the_User t1_jclfc3c wrote
My roomie works in a warehouse and his thought pattern under load is that if he takes a break, hes just going to have to do all that work anyway the next day, in addition to the rest of it.
So he cant enjoy days off, even if he got them. Its bonkers.
0002millertime t1_jcmnv7c wrote
The system is working exactly as designed.
Criticalhit_jk t1_jcniy9o wrote
And this, despite overwhelming evidence that shows they could be making more money if only their employees were well rested, well fed, well clothed, well homed and well educated.
You hear it alot, but it's always true. The cruelty is the point. They don't care how much they have - after a certain point increasing your buying power is meaningless after all. It's about having more than you and they'll go out of their way to stomp on the heads of anyone treading water to keep you there. They like how it feels
esotsmer t1_jcr7jvz wrote
It does not matter how much evidence you provide them
draculamilktoast t1_jcpd1bv wrote
If you're a billionaire and your victim has $1000, it's easier to take $500 away from them than to make another billion, because ultimately only relative wealth matters to human beings. If you're the victim, it's better to perform poorly by not taking breaks because you can claim to have done nothing wrong while punishing your owner by performing poorly. Working extremely hard without producing actual results is basically a form of quiet quitting which is immune to detection because all metrics point towards the quiet quitter being extremely productive.
greendude90 t1_jcqmm7k wrote
The system is designed in the favour of managers and corporates
prepaidmillions t1_jcqs8h7 wrote
Exactly if you are taking break then you would have to complete a work next day
[deleted] t1_jclo268 wrote
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[deleted] t1_jcmj58k wrote
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Hashtagworried t1_jckj8rb wrote
Also in healthcare. This can’t be any more true.
FwibbFwibb t1_jclvn4c wrote
So the management successfully pushed the guilt onto you for them not hiring enough people. Start taking your full breaks. This issue needs to reach management and it won't if you keep covering for them.
woozhou t1_jcq2ufe wrote
The management is always successful in making people feel guilty about their breaks. Even though there is sufficient evidence that taking breaks can increase efficiency in work
TheTinRam t1_jckqb8c wrote
In teaching I don’t feel that guilt, but I work while I eat lunch just to keep up
r2y4o6t8a t1_jcp9nva wrote
Being a junior doctor I completely agree with you about the work environment. You are always under the pressure that someone might die because of your break.
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