We are very well paid for very cushy work. It's not good for anyone's work to get worse, but it's not a huge hit to society if a well-paid cushy job gets less cushy.
And presumably people buy our work because it's valuable to them. Multiplying that by 8 would be a pretty big benefit to society.
I don't want my job to get less fun, but I would press that button without hesitation. It would be an incredible trade for society at large.
Software devs jobs getting less cushy is no biggie. We can afford to amp up the efficiency.
Teachers jobs got "less cushy" -> not great for users/consumers or the ppl in those jobs.
Doctors jobs got "less cushy" -> not great for users/consumers or the ppl in those jobs.
Even waiters/ check-out staff, stockists jobs at restaurants, groceries and AMZ got "less cushy" -> not great for users/consumers or the ppl in those jobs. at least not when you need to call someone for help.
These things are not as disconnected as they seem. Businesses are in fact made up of people.
When I burned out I experienced skill regression and short term memory loss. Like, an inability to remember specific events of the day before, inability to perform skills I had done for decades like play an instrument. Took over a year to stabilize and return to normal.
I cannot remember events, conversations, or details about important things. I have partially lost my ability to code, because I get partway through implementing a feature and forget what pieces I've done and which pieces still need to be done
I can still write it, but the quality of my work has plummeted, which is part of why I'm off on leave now
was going through something similar. here's my anti burnout protocol thats kept me functional all the way to my current position as founder and CTO of a profitable startup.
1. 1 tablespoon of cold extracted cod liver oil EVERY MORNING
2. 30 min of running 3-4 times a week
3. 2-3 weight lifting sessions every week
4. regular walks.
5. cross train on different intellectually stimulating subjects. doing the same cognitive tasks over and over is like repetive motion on your muscles
6. regularly scheduled "fallow mind time." I set aside an 30 min to an hour everyday to just sit in a chair and let my mind wander. its not meditation. I jsut sit and let my mind drift to whatever it wants.
7. while it should be avoided, in the event that you have to crunch, RESPECT THE COOLDOWN. take downtime after. don't let your nontechnical leads talk you out of it. thinking hard for extended periods of time requires appropriate recovery.
the human brain is a complex system and while we think of our mind as abstract and immaterial, it is in reality a whole lot of physical systems that grow, change and use resources the same way any other physical system in your body does. just like muscles need to recover after a workout to get stronger, so too does your brain after extended periods of deep thinking.
Mine is more of a long term memory loss. Inability to recall some memorable events from months or even a year ago. I’ll definitely check or go talk with someone.
But I am struggling to remember things I did not used to struggle with
Going to an event on a weekend with my wife and completely forgetting that we ran into a friend there. Not just "oh yeah I forgot we saw them", like feeling my wife is lying to me when she tells me we saw them. Texting them to ask and they agree we saw each other
These are people I trust with my life so I believe they would not gaslight me, my own memory has just failed
Many examples like this, just completely blacking out things. Not forgetting everything, but blacking out large pieces of my daily life. Even big things
FWIW, I am not your doctor: Taking a daily antioxidant, glutathione, has helped me manage memory-related symptoms that appeared coincident with other burnout symptoms.
Disclaimer: talk to your doctor. I don’t know if your doctor can tell you whether this is a good idea, but it might help in some countries with good medical systems.
If you think software development is cushy, I wonder what kind of software you're writing. Because there are different levels; getting something to work is not the same thing as writing maintainable, high quality software.
I've seen plenty enough people try, really try, to get into software development; but they just can't do it.
This places a lot of faith in the following assumptions:
1. Efficiency measures as written to benchmark this coupling with economic productivity overall
2. Monetary assessments of value in the context of businesses spending money corresponding with social value
3. The gains of economic productivity being distributed across society to any degree, or the effect of this disparity itself being negligible
4. The negative externalities of these processes scaling less quickly than whatever we're measuring in our productivity metric
5. Aforementioned externalities being able to scale to even a lesser degree in lockstep with productivity without crashing all of the above, if not causing even more catastrophic outcomes
I have very little faith in any of these assumptions
The hypothetical that we're 8x as productive but the work isn't as fun isn't "society becoming shittier".