“Quiet Quitters,” Whose Fault Is It? | DarrenDaily On-Demand

“Quiet Quitters,” Whose Fault Is It? | DarrenDaily On-Demand

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Descriptions:

Who is at fault for “Quiet Quitters,” “Coasters,” and those “Acting their wage”? You may not like the answer as Darren cuts to the chase revealing the four reasons these mindsets have infected your team and how you can purge them.

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2 Comments

  1. Quitter? Whose fault is it? Well, in my case of quitting my job, it's my boss's fault. She once sternly questioned me for putting black linens on the tables for the wedding reception instead of white, the correct color (but in my defense, we usually do black linens for any event, and I don't even generally set the reception linens). Oh, and she was upset I had signed up for a one-person shift. One of our student leader's responsibilities is organizing who works which shifts on the schedule, and my boss scolded him for not noticing I had signed up to go solo. When she asked him if she thought I could do the shift, I answered for him with a firm "yes," because I felt belittled by her. She said she didn't think so, was all "I've told you not to sign up for shifts by yourself, I've been very clear about that, I don't know how much clearer I can get for you to listen" (something like that, so I'm not perfectly quoting her), and she told me I need someone there to give me instructions and guide me.

    And not only that. She is ALWAYS at work. And I can see why. She's got no spouse or kids, so no wonder she works so much. Probably so she can have something to do and focus on. She is in no rush to get home, thus why she stays late to finish cleaning up–around midnight. I'll bet she works a lot of wedding receptions for personal compensation.

    Do you know how anxious I get around her? It feels like raindrops, about to ruin your picnic when you were hoping for a nice sunny day. And I always hated going to work, just because I would likely see her and perhaps get scolded or questioned for whatever. I just couldn't take it anymore. I had to quit, for no other reason but to be free from her. If she wasn't so opinionated and obtuse, I would be able to work the job I never had a problem with. Just her to wreck my work life. Well, now it's over. I'm gonna miss my job and my coworkers, but I'm not gonna miss my boss.