Erik Ven wrote:"If your job/skill would be automated out of existence what would you do instead?" I said: "I would start to think about why I so strongly believe that I need a job..."
I was wondering what your answer would be to the same question. Also what is your answer to the question "Why do we need a job?"
Roberto pokachinni wrote:Some people do not want 'jobs' that are demeaning, that serve no purpose for their lives, that give them no sense of worth. This would be sensible, some would say common sense. Other's would not agree. Some people accept these jobs, and some of these people feel that these jobs are all there is in the world, and some of these people have no real sense of self worth, let alone an idea that they have choices.
My online educational sites:
https://www.pinterest.ca/joelbc/homestead-methods-tools-equipment/
https://www.pinterest.ca/joelbc/mixed-shops/
E Hambleton wrote:Hello,
To answer the op's question "why do we need a job?" My feeling on this is that we need jobs because we start the race of life behind the eight ball so to speak. You want an education? You'll need a student loan. Want a car to get to that job? You'll need a loan for that car. Want somewhere to live? You'll need a mortgage etc. etc. Debt is the reason you need a job IMO. Plain and simple!
“Better to die fighting for freedom than be a prisoner all the days of your life.” - Bob Marley
"As I get older I realize that being wrong is not a bad thing like they teach it in school. It is an opportunity to learn something" (Richard Feynman) https://tranqvillium.org
Erik Ven wrote:Our very basic needs (at least according to Maslow) are the physiological ones, as in air, food, water. Add to this the second level, of security (shelter), some reserves for rainy days, health and if you want to live beyond caveman style, you'll need electrical power.
Permaculture, Tiny House Living, Homesteading
http://www.canadianrenegade.com
Matthew Lewis wrote:
..... you better have a back up plan.
"As I get older I realize that being wrong is not a bad thing like they teach it in school. It is an opportunity to learn something" (Richard Feynman) https://tranqvillium.org
Erik Ven wrote:I am on a mission to prove that being jobless does not mean being moneyless, or incomeless, or workless, and being self sufficient not just capable to provide a luxurious and fulfilling life, but is the only way that can.
Erik Ven wrote:If you produce all that were listed as needs yourself, you get to keep 100% (less some expenses) of the fruit of your work. I elaborated in this in a previous post, and I called it a theory, and Joel said that that is exactly what the problem was with it, that it was only a a theory and in reality 19 out of 20 family who would try it would fail.
I think it would fail only if you don't do it right. If it fails, it is not because it is inherently flawed, but because working 14 hours a day is not sustainable, it's not permaculture, you are missing the "perma" from permaculture by doing it in a way that can not sustain you.
My online educational sites:
https://www.pinterest.ca/joelbc/homestead-methods-tools-equipment/
https://www.pinterest.ca/joelbc/mixed-shops/
Jeremy Franklin wrote:I think the difference between "work" and "a job" is mostly mindset. I've had several jobs, and I've been self-employed several times. I can tell you, you're always working for someone else. If it's not a boss, it's a client, and after a while, you start to realize that the differences are mostly just in the paperwork.
Idle dreamer
Jeremy Franklin wrote:These notions of big bad business taking advantage of the little guy are mostly perpetuated by people who have never seen the numbers.
Jeremy Franklin wrote:I think the difference between "work" and "a job" is mostly mindset.
Jeremy Franklin wrote:I've had several jobs, and I've been self-employed several times. I can tell you, you're always working for someone else. If it's not a boss, it's a client, and after a while, you start to realize that the differences are mostly just in the paperwork.
Jeremy Franklin wrote:Eric, your scenario of taking home 10% of what you produce vs 100% of what you produce is just not accurate. First, anyone who has been in upper management at a company will tell you that labor and the associated expenses (benefits, payroll taxes, etc) is almost always your biggest expense on your profit and loss statement, frequently as much as 40-50% of revenue. After you add other overhead as well as marketing, etc, you're considered to be doing pretty well if a company is making as much as a 25% profit margin. Many are fighting for 5%. The simple fact of the matter is that if any company could make a 90% profit margin off your work, it wouldn't take long for another company to come along and offer you 15% and take 85%, and then another offering 20 for 80, etc
Jeremy Franklin wrote: Most companies are run by good people who want to treat their employees right.
Jeremy Franklin wrote: And the reason these companies exist, and why people work for them is that as a large group of people, we can generate a whole greater than the sum of its parts.
Jeremy Franklin wrote: Yes, if you work for yourself in a business that has no expenses and no taxes, you can take home 100% of your revenue. However, that revenue will not be on the same scale as what you can produce as part of a larger company.
Jeremy Franklin wrote: Personally, I would rather have 10% of a million dollars than I would 100% of 30 grand. The fact of the matter is, with my skill sets and personality type, I can make more working for someone else, pay somebody to build my house for me, and still have more left in the bank than if I did all the labor and built the house myself. (There are other reasons for doing it yourself, but speaking strictly financially, that's the reality)
Jeremy Franklin wrote:I think what most people object to is a mindset where you "have" to go to work every day, and you "have" to do what someone else tells you to do. This sense of what feels like enforced slavery grates on our sense of self and our natural inclinations of freedom. But, again, this can be rectified with a simple shift in perspective.
Jeremy Franklin wrote:As I said in the beginning, if your goal is money vs just working to grow your own food or work your land for your own benefit - if currency is at all in play, then you are working for someone else. You are performing a service - something that they want done, not you - in exchange for money. Whether you get paid as a W2 employee or a 1099 contractor, or cash under the table, that's mostly paperwork and in the latter case, small scale tax evasion. But you're still doing a task that has no personal meaning to you in exchange for currency. When you understand that, then you understand that you can always walk away, no matter what the paperwork says. You always have that option, so long as you own the consequences of your actions and believe in your own ability to earn somewhere else. With that knowledge comes the freedom we all crave.
Jeremy Franklin wrote: I work for someone else in what you call a "job," but I do so by choice, because it's the most efficient way to get the most money for the least amount of effort on my part. But because my expenses are so much lower than my income (and even more so, when my land will largely be supporting my food needs) I know that at any point if things get sour or I'm just not having fun anymore, I can walk. Just having that knowledge in the back of my mind makes all the difference in the world, and frankly, gives me a much greater capacity for putting up with other people's shit, just because I know I don't "have" to.
"As I get older I realize that being wrong is not a bad thing like they teach it in school. It is an opportunity to learn something" (Richard Feynman) https://tranqvillium.org
Cultivate abundance for people, plants and wildlife - Growing with Nature
Erik Ven wrote:
Jeremy Franklin wrote: I work for someone else in what you call a "job," but I do so by choice, because it's the most efficient way to get the most money for the least amount of effort on my part. But because my expenses are so much lower than my income (and even more so, when my land will largely be supporting my food needs) I know that at any point if things get sour or I'm just not having fun anymore, I can walk. Just having that knowledge in the back of my mind makes all the difference in the world, and frankly, gives me a much greater capacity for putting up with other people's shit, just because I know I don't "have" to.
From what you wrote it sounds like you are in a very privileged position at least jobwise. I was there, and now I know that I had a very difficult time to see from there the position in which my employees were, let alone understand their struggles. Now I feel privileged to have had the opportunity to break out of it.
My online educational sites:
https://www.pinterest.ca/joelbc/homestead-methods-tools-equipment/
https://www.pinterest.ca/joelbc/mixed-shops/
Erik Ven wrote:
Matthew Lewis wrote:
..... you better have a back up plan.
Would you share yours with us?
Permaculture, Tiny House Living, Homesteading
http://www.canadianrenegade.com
My online educational sites:
https://www.pinterest.ca/joelbc/homestead-methods-tools-equipment/
https://www.pinterest.ca/joelbc/mixed-shops/
r ranson wrote:
There is enough demand that I could work every hour of the day, if I wanted.
The thing is, I like my wage work best. Working for someone else gives me a huge amount of freedom. I don't have to do tasks I don't enjoy and can walk away from it at any time. Because I enjoy the work, I do it well which keeps the boss coming back to me when there's work to do. Self-employed activities require me to do all sorts of things and pile me up with obligations that I cannot walk away from. If I take money for a contract, I have to finish it in a timely manner, no matter what else comes up in my life. If I get pneumonia, like I did last year, I could call in sick to work and other people can do the job. But I couldn't forgo my self-employed obligations.
Still able to dream.
My land teaches me how to farm
Natasha Abrahams wrote: I had a real job the first five years I owned this place, to pay for necessary investments. I had to employ somebody to work here whom I paid about 10 % of my income. I hated it. Used to sit in quarterly board meetings designing vegetable rotations and be jealous of the person I was paying to have all the fun while I was stuck hearing the Chief Financial Officer's report. He still works here but we get along so much better now that I can have fun too.
After my full time gig ended I started a small home business making handmade soap and body products. ...
But most of all what I love is independence. Every cabbage I pick from this land is one less I am putting into the system. The same system that crushes people and leaves them without work or pride. It gives me endless pleasure to know that my cabbage is ethical.
My online educational sites:
https://www.pinterest.ca/joelbc/homestead-methods-tools-equipment/
https://www.pinterest.ca/joelbc/mixed-shops/
Joel Bercardin wrote:In my opinion, too few people start out wealthy enough to just invest in land, equipment, and improvements and then immediately be self-supporting (for themselves & family) on their land.
You can see with only one eye open, but you'll probably run into things and stub your toe. The big picture matters.
Some places need to be wild
Some places need to be wild
Come join me at www.peacockorchard.com
Some places need to be wild
The original Silicon Valley hillbilly.
The only taste of success some people get is to take a bite out of you. Or this tiny ad:
A rocket mass heater heats your home with one tenth the wood of a conventional wood stove
http://woodheat.net
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