|
|
|
|
|
by LegitShady
1099 days ago
|
|
For a while I worked in a government role that was very close to the political layer of government - one or two people separate you and many elected politicians. The emergencies and surprises never stopped. Timelines would change quickly - “start working on it but no deadline” would regularly turn into “this is due at the end of the month” and then “Can you have this done in two weeks” and then “what can we accomplish by the end of the week” and then “this needs to be complete in the system by 4pm tomorrow” sometimes all within a few days. Sudden weekend work including absolutely ridiculous requests that I can’t talk about was pretty normal. Many people involved essentially volunteered large portions of their non-work time to the government because their positions did not include overtime compensation and they thought if they put in the work eventually they’d climb to a position where it would be worth it. Every meeting was a potential crisis, and the bosses between you and the politicians were no better because of downhill shit theory. Some of the non political leadership were helicoptered political allies instead of technical specialists in the thing we were supposedly supposed to be doing. I realized about 6 months in that even though in meetings they kept saying “we know workloads are higher than normal but we think we’ll get back to a more reasonable period soon” was just lip service, and that we were actually just in a permanent state of crisis of after crisis handed down to us by politicians who would take days off to go golfing. All this at wages that were not comparable to private industry but on the other hand less worries about tracking hours for billing like I would have had to do outside the public service. I am glad to have left it behind. My health, both mental and physical, suffered even though I couldn’t tell at the time when I was going through it. There is no reason to live your life that way. |
|