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Paul T Shattuck, MSW, PhD's avatar

Excellent piece. Important message! Thank you. Check out my recent post on another systemic source of workplace stress and burnout: https://paultshattuck.substack.com/p/the-perpetual-hunger-games-why-you

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Jeremy Keim's avatar

Ben, your piece reminded me that as a teenager, when I’d head to work at the Gap, at a fish fry restaurant, even to my job at a literal beach as a lifeguard, I would think “I am never going to find a job I like”.

As I got older, I realized how important the relationships and ways we worked made certain jobs incredibly wonderful and made the tougher parts of the job not only bearable but meaningful. I’m still friends with many of the crew I worked with in my mid-20s. We all worked hard, we all went out to happy hours (my dad’s advice of “never skip a happy hour” is one that even after quitting drinking 5 years ago I still try to maintain), and I think most important of all, we all went into the office.

So my question: do you think that work culture can exist in organizations that are fully remote?

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