| ▲ | mr_mitm 3 days ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||
It's also a low risk topic that can generate lots of follow up questions. It's regular small talk. Also, people here seem to downplay it, but doesn't it tell you a lot about a person what they do roughly half of their waking time? What they chose to do with their life? Sure, you're not your job or your career, but it's also a very normal part about getting to know someone and I'm not sure equating it to some way of gauging success levels is necessarily to right way to think about it. | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | jasode 3 days ago | parent | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||
>It's regular small talk. Also, people here seem to downplay it, but doesn't it tell you a lot about a person what they do roughly half of their waking time? What they chose to do with their life? Having a natural ebb & flow to conversation is all true but that's not the issue. Let me restate it differently. It's ok and natural to ask what people do/did for work. It's also natural to respond and share what was a significant aspect of their life. The meta-observation is: others then like to compress whatever life narrative they hear into a "shorthand" or "identity" -- even if the recipient never intended it to be his/her identity. Several parent comments mention "their work being their identity is the problem". My point is that the identity we get tagged with is often outside of our control and we didn't create the problem of work being our identity. My neighbors know me as the "ex-consultant". For that identity to change, I'd have to do something new that was significant enough to override that ... such as... get into another career, open a restaurant, become founder of a startup, etc. How does one have "no identity related to their job"? Sometimes you can't unless one wants to be evasive about what one does to earn money. | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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| ▲ | pixl97 3 days ago | parent | prev [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||
>It's also a low risk topic In modern life, yes. I wonder if it was such a low risk topic as we moved towards the past? For example the fear of the stranger is something that is very common in past writing across a number of cultures. If you met a stranger and they said they were a soldier it would have different ramifications than if they said they were a baker. Also in smaller social groups that required the work of everyone to survive it was a way of measuring the resources available in said group. | |||||||||||||||||||||||