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Honestly, would you stay or go?

57 replies

2022TheYearofMe · 12/12/2021 17:14

Name changed for this as I don’t want anything identifying.

So, I hate my job. Really, really, REALLY hate it. I’m miserable, stressed, dread every Tuesday morning, can't sleep for the anxiety.

I’ve discussed with my Line Manager my reasons for disliking the job again and again, it improves for a little while then goes off again. It’s the nature of the job, it’s not my LM’s fault, the job and I are simply not a good match, nothing will change that.

I work for a large well known corporate company, and I’ve been there 36.5 years, they’ve been good to me, paid well, 34 years defined benefit pension, 2 years defined contribution (where I upped my contribution to 50% and employer provided 13%). I've always given 110% to the role and received decades of good performance reviews.

I’ve always worked full time, even when the kids were small, I’ve brought them up pretty much by myself whilst DH built his career and worked away. I’ve done the entire mental and physical load at home inside and outside including all the stereotypical “men’s work”.

I went part time 2 years ago, and now I only hate it 3 days a week instead of 5. Moving to another internal role isn’t really an option as it will be frying pan to fire and picking up another P/T position will be like finding hen’s teeth.

DH earns well over 100k a year, been together 38 years from teenagers and we share everything including all money.
His bonus is 4 x my salary on top.

Kids grown and left. We’ve paid for their driving lessons and first cars, put them through university, helped them with renovations to their first homes (they saved the deposit but both could only afford tatty houses).

Mortgage paid off. No debts, no finance, no loans.

Elderly parents that increasingly take more and more of my time. I spend days doing hospital, optician, dentist, GP trips, taking them shopping, managing their finances, letting them offload their fears and moans.

I’m 55, DH fully 1000% supports me packing it in and not working ever again. Adult DC fully support me giving up work and “retiring” as they say, but it probably means being more available for them!

So, and this isn't genuinely meant to be any kind of stealth boast and I don't want to offend the 1000s of other hard working women out that that have to keep going regardless, but genuinely, in my situation would you pack it all in and not be in paid employment ever again if you were in my shoes?

It sounds like a no brainer on paper, which is why I’ve typed all this out. I simply daren't press the button.

So why do I feel like I can’t do it? Is it because it’s been part of my life since I was 19? Is it because I have always valued my financial independence, even though I could divorce tomorrow retain my great pension (his is a similar value) and have a 50/50 split of all our assets? Even though we are happy together and in it for life, even though DH is incredibly generous, and I hold all the purse strings?

I guess I’m looking for an outside opinion, maybe for reasons why I shouldn’t do it, or reasons why (as I suspect) this is the most incredible opportunity, and I am very fortunate and won’t look back.

No nasty comments please, I know I’m lucky but I’m feeling vulnerable right now and terrified I will make the wrong decision and throw away a well-paid, flexible career with great holiday allowance and pension contributions, worked from home since 2006, nice set of colleagues – even though I am miserable and don’t sleep at night with the anxiety of the role.

WWYD?

OP posts:
Vanishun · 13/12/2021 08:58

Dear god why would you hesitate,

Misty84 · 13/12/2021 09:04

You’ve said you’re miserable and don’t sleep at night with anxiety. Therefore definitely leave!

hauntedvagina · 13/12/2021 09:07

I would absolutely leave in a heartbeat, however... if you're still slightly on the fence, could you take a 12 month sabbatical and reassess when you've had time to clear your head a little?

middleager · 13/12/2021 09:08

I'd leave in a heartbeat if I were in your position.

millymae · 13/12/2021 09:34

You hate your job, so if you take into account the number of hours you are there and the hours you spend worrying about going, then you are spending at least half your week feeling unhappy.
Why struggle on for another so many years until retirement when you are not strapped for money and have full support from family. - at 55 half your life has already gone - don’t waste the time you’ve got left being miserable. Someone who is obviously as resourceful as you will quickly find you feet and I’d put good money on the fact that once you’ve made the leap you’ll regret the time you wasted thinking about doing it..
The money thing is surely a none issue - you are financially secure, presumably have savings of you own that you have worked hard for so dip into them if you need to. They will be no good to you when you are gone.

JustGotToKeepOnKeepingOn · 13/12/2021 09:47

There are loads of jobs with flexibility and part-time options. It's the only good thing to have come out of Brexit and Covid.

Have some counselling to get your thoughts together, then write a list of all the things you hate about your job and a list of all the things you want in a new job and go for it.

Get yourself on LinkedIn and do a search for PT flexible jobs, you'll be pleasantly surprised with what you find. Sign up to a few recruitment agencies too. They'll rip your arm off! There's a huge shortage of experienced workers at the moment. You're in a stronger position than you think.

Ariela · 13/12/2021 10:11

You say you work for a big corporate...do they offer any secondment /volunteering for charity? If you didn't quite yet want to break the umbilical cord?

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