Why Do So Many People Hate Their Jobs? Cover

Why Do So Many People Hate Their Jobs?

People hate their jobs because they don’t know they’re the ones supposed to bring meaning, passion and fun to them.

They think: “If only I did X instead of Y, then I would finally be happy.”

But you’ll often find people who hate their current job will hate their next job also. And the next one. And the one after that.

Because it’s not about what you do. It’s about how you choose to do it. The truth is every job offers you the chance to do it with meaning, be passionate about it and have fun along the way.

The question is: will you? You can bring those things to even the most mundane job in the world.

Most mornings when I go to the study room at school, I see the cleaning lady do her work. She knows me by now. We have our little routine already:

I smile and nod.

She smiles. Nods back.

And we both continue on our way, carrying that smile throughout the day.

(after that, I’m always good to go!)

I’m not psyched about studying, she’s not ecstatic about cleaning, but we both choose to make the best of what is currently our task.

It’s not your job to do your job so you can get paid and go home. It’s your job to do whatever happens to be the to-do of the day with as much meaning, as much passion and as much fun as you can muster.

Once you understand that, you will never hate any job, ever again. Whether it’s a stepping stone or your final destination, you’ll do it like you were born to.

Because you were.

Now excuse me, I have some smiles to hand out.

Nik

Niklas Göke writes for dreamers, doers, and unbroken optimists. A self-taught writer with more than a decade of experience, Nik has published over 2,000 articles. His work has attracted tens of millions of readers and been featured in places like Business Insider, CNBC, Lifehacker, and many others. Nik has self-published 2 books thus far, most recently 2-Minute Pep Talks. Outside of his day job and daily blog, Nik loves reading, video games, and pizza, which he eats plenty a slice of in Munich, Germany, where he resides.