I seriously couldnt even imagine that . I put in a few 60 hour wks maybe even a few 65 hour . 6 day work wks. I had no life, came home from work showerd, maybe ate dinner then strait to bed. Girlfriend at the time freakin hated it. Also gym was not even a possibility. Yeah i had some sweet coin for xmas gifts that year but over all was not worth it. My body felt totally worn down mentally and physically
What the fuck are people doing past the tenth hour? Is there even any quality work being done at that point?
I've done more than my fair share of 12 hr shifts, did a 4 month spell on nightshift with no nights off, used to come home, have breakfast go and train then bed... Pure robot, but you get used to it...We didn't work every single hr, but you get conditioned to it and you actualy become restless when your not doing it and count the money you've missed when your not there. I doubled my salary every year for the past 6 yr doing this, luckily enough my new job allows me to earn as much doing 41 hrs, but as I more or less work for my self its more like 4/5 hrs tops per day.
Doubled every year for 6 years, what is this dream job you speak of?
well billionaires work throughout the clock, I think it all depends what workgo ask the schedule of google owners, they have sex with their phone, no life, but they definitely get quality work done
Using google owners is a bad example. A lot of their job is just attending meetings, telling people what to do, or approving things.Its much different than a medical doctor having to do surgery. Trust me, you don't want someone doing surgery on you who has been working 60+ hours a week. You don't want an engineer building a bridge who has worked 60+ hours a week. Again, the Law of Diminishing Return. Research is quite clear on job effectiveness and amount of hours work. With that much overload, and with such a delicate job, they're bound to eventually make a mistake. You don't want a doctor working on your brain who is overworked. So, yes, it definitely depends what work you do.
Dunno about the states, but uk jnr docs and nurses work upto 80 a week regularly... It depends on job culture and what's expectedNo bridges were ever built working flat weeks that's for sure
Its the Law of Diminishing Return (as one input variable is increased, there is a point at which the marginal increase in output begins to decrease). Take, for example, studying for exam. You can study for X amount of hours, but at some point, after X hours, it doesnt matter. Your brain is not absorbing the information and youre not learning anything. Its best to take a break, instead of continuing to study. I'd imagine the same thing happens to people who perform any task, work included. In their minds, they are accomplishing more. But after a certain amount of time, its just not effective.