Or, you will always be approaching situations with that in the back of your mind and it'll really sour your experience and stress you out. It's helpful to have goals to work towards, and it's good to be working on a project that has inherent meaning, and to have relationships that have inherent meaning, but if your goal is to get status or achieve something, you might fail and then you'll feel terrible. Something about it seems to miss the point of how we should experience life. I was interested in fusing those two things. I will always have this terrible job, I've always been terrible, I'll always be terrible. When you're depressed, you remember that you've always been depressed, and you predict that you always will be depressed, and I think the same feelings come out when when work isn't going well, too. I thought was an interesting match about dead-end jobs and depression, and that's this feeling of endlessness and also complete lack of energy. Halle Butlers latest novel, 'The New Me,' continues the authors interrogation of the disappointments of the workplace and the diminished rewards of the so-called American dream. She's always hunching and it's these little things that just sort of ratchet her up. It's a tension that sort of ends up infecting her body, too - her shoulders are always tight. On the way she stores that resentment inside
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |