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dalt01
03-10-2010, 11:42 AM
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jog58
03-10-2010, 11:44 AM
I like to pretend I don't have a job on my day off. :lmao:

ADP
03-10-2010, 11:45 AM
it is my day off..........and guess where i am........yup, in my office. came in around noon to clean up a few things.........how about you? do you go in on your day off or stay as far away as possible?
I pretty much spend most of my days off in Orlando. With that said, I bring my job with me. This darn thing they call an IPhone has my work email and calendar on it. So, not only am I checking my ETicket application, I'm checking my work email, making phone calls, etc.

I guess my answer is both..I stay physically away, but mentally, I'm there. :)

aggielawyer
03-10-2010, 11:48 AM
I'm self-employed, so the boundaries between working and not working are very blurred. I realized last year that I have to really go away for me to be 'off.'

dgthree
03-10-2010, 12:53 PM
I live about an hour from my office, so I don't usually go there on days off, but if I'm off on a weekday and at home, I'll check work emails from time to time. If I'm not home, sometimes I'll check work emails at the beginning or end of the day.

FireDancer
03-10-2010, 01:11 PM
I'm an I.T. Director so from time to time I have to do some work after hours or on my day off. Usually this is a pre-planned upgrade or a disaster/emergency but they are rare.

I am hourly so when I do any of these, even via VPN from home I punch in and get paid.

DisneyKevin
03-10-2010, 01:11 PM
My commute is 10 feet.

It's not unusual to answer emails at 3:30am.

Stacy's a freak
03-10-2010, 01:23 PM
The office has my cell phone and I have a blackberry to access emails from anywhere ... but I don't think about work when it's a non-work day OR if I'm on vacation. I know that they will call me if it is a true emergency and that is fine.

k5jmh
03-10-2010, 01:26 PM
It's not unusual to answer emails at 3:30am.

It is not unusual for me to answer e-mails, remote into the office, go into the office, get phone calls, etc at 3:30am. The pipeline must flow. My job is a 24 hour a day job. My office tuned on international data and roaming on my Blackberry for my last 2 cruises. But, it really is not a job if you enjoy what you do. I love my job!

Disneybridein2k3
03-10-2010, 01:53 PM
It is not unusual for me to answer e-mails, remote into the office, go into the office, get phone calls, etc at 3:30am. The pipeline must flow. My job is a 24 hour a day job. My office tuned on international data and roaming on my Blackberry for my last 2 cruises. But, it really is not a job if you enjoy what you do. I love my job!
I didn't realize they did this for 1-900 operators ;) Glad to hear you are loving your job!

Tonya2426
03-10-2010, 02:05 PM
I didn't realize they did this for 1-900 operators ;) Glad to hear you are loving your job!

Bow chicka wow wow :rolleyes1

SamSam
03-10-2010, 02:29 PM
We have our own business, which we run from a home office, which goes with us (laptops) wherever we are. The good part of it is that we can go places and stay much longer, as long as we are connected and work a few hours a day. The down side is, there really is no 'off' time.

jewels1916
03-10-2010, 02:33 PM
I try to avoid work at all costs when I have a day off. I even avoid my boss (who is also known as Dad). :confused3

dpuck1998
03-10-2010, 02:50 PM
Like most of the nerds, I'm always a phone call away. Since I work for school I only work after hours during upgrades and installs. On vacation I get calls, answer emails, remote in, etc. They are very flexible with my schedule so I don't mind.

exwdwcm
03-10-2010, 03:01 PM
just had this conversation with a coworker in a meeting this am. Typically, i really strive for a good work/home life balance. last job gave me flexibility (working at home etc.), but that meant also being more available 24/7.

this job, if i get my work done (and usually do) and there isn't a big project or deadline, then i leave my job here at 5pm friday and don't think about it again until 8am monday morning. Sure, we work late when needed, but it isn't needed very often. I enjoy that, it is important for me being a working mom with a little one at home (2yo)---the time I am at home, i really want to focus on my family, not still working.

but 2 years ago, i was working on new year's eve, literally at midnight (and well beyond) trying to launch a new site. THat was when i was the lone marketing ranger at a small company. Never doing that again, still didn't launch on time anyhow.

luke
03-10-2010, 03:12 PM
I'm a Spanish teacher so days off are restricted to school holidays, but I will often go in to tidy up, get things ready for term, mark books etc.

Last week I'd taken some pupils to Spain for a few days, and when our flight got back into Liverpool at 2pm I went straight into school, even though I didn't have to!!

:goodvibes

sshaw10060
03-10-2010, 04:01 PM
A lot of the expectation of bringing home work hinges on whether you are salaried or hourly. The assumption is that if they are paying you a salary you will do whatever it takes to get the job done. I have to remind my wife every once in a while that they don't pay people the kind of money I make to work 40 hours a week Mon-Fri and not think about their job when they are at home.

I try not to check my work e-mail on weekends because somwhere along the way I realized that all the e-mail I received over the weekend could wait or was negative. I get a lot of "XXXXX screwed up can you please talk to them" e-mails. If I start ruminating on one of these at 2 on a Saturday afternoon it might just ruin the rest of my day off. I am available pretty much 24/7 x 365 by cell or pager. I have decided not to check e-mail for the 3 weeks we are in Eurpope this summer, so that should be interesting. I am going to set up a new account and give a few key people the address in case they really need my input on something. I figure I'll keep in touch that way.

The one thing about my job that drives me nuts is this: I work 7 or 8 weekends a year which is perfectly fine with me. The problem is the rest of the hospital/University pretty much works Mon-Fri. As a result I am lucky if I get one day off these weeks since there is always some meeting to attend or class to teach Tue-Thu when I could take a day off.

Launchpad11B
03-10-2010, 04:24 PM
Unless I'm on official leave. I'm on call 24/7, 365. To deploy anywhere in the world. So technically I'm never really off duty.

DisneyKevin
03-10-2010, 04:34 PM
Unless I'm on official leave. I'm on call 24/7, 365. To deploy anywhere in the world. So technically I'm never really off duty.

I could say the same things.

Ok...so my duties are different.;)

Becx N Gav
03-10-2010, 04:45 PM
Working in a production/factory environment I can only go during work hours (what a shame :laughing:) I'm actually not allowed to work alone in the labs in case something happens. We used to have 3 shifts so I stayed late some days but we're back down to one and half / two shifts. DH on the other hand will get calls and check e-mails as well as doing work in the evenings and at weekends. He will go into work some weekends too, he gets time back but money would be more useful :rolleyes:

Launchpad11B
03-10-2010, 04:57 PM
I could say the same things.

Ok...so my duties are different.;)

We're practically twins! :hug:

AnninIowa
03-10-2010, 05:22 PM
I own my own business and work from home...so there is really no such thing as a day off for me. A day off means no money...and I really like money!! :goodvibes

*NikkiBell*
03-10-2010, 05:44 PM
As a teacher, this comes with the job and is essentially expected by both parents and administrators. So, yes, I do work on my days off....and my hours off....and during my lunch....and during the summer....and...and....

Get the picture? ;)

With that being said, I wouldn't trade my job for anything else in the world.

HunnyBunny
03-10-2010, 06:26 PM
My commute is 10 feet.

It's not unusual to answer emails at 3:30am.

Same here Kevin! Although not so much of the 3:30 am part! My office hours are "technically" 3-midnight, however today I have been here since 8am!

It is all too easy to work when you work from home. But then again, it's nice to spend dinner with the family, tuck the kids into bed. I'll come in early any day to spend time with my children later on.

I do my best to put an out of office message on for the weekends.

dalt01
03-10-2010, 07:03 PM
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k5jmh
03-10-2010, 07:24 PM
I didn't realize they did this for 1-900 operators ;) Glad to hear you are loving your job!

Hey Baby, What you doin? :rotfl2:

WaltD4Me
03-10-2010, 07:35 PM
I'm never really off. I have days off, but often get phone calls or have to do something for work on the computer. I am totally off while offically on vacation, but regular days off usually just mean I don't have to actually go into the office, but do need to be available by phone. On my last "day off" I got six phone calls, four of which were totally not necessary. :rolleyes:

doconeill
03-10-2010, 08:44 PM
I work with computers all day. I'm on call quite a bit, more so recently because I'm sort of the only one in my group while we try and hire more.

As a hobby, I do my own web stuff (big surprise from my sig...), although answering questions on the DIS seems to have absorbed all that available time lately... :)

But since I'm often on the computer, it is also easy for me to monitor my work email - so when a request comes in, it is easy for me to deal with it. Or if it is a critical issue, I know the on-call is probably going to call me anyways since I'm the senior guy and can fix anything...so in the end, except when I'm at WDW, I'm working. :(

Now if only I can combine the DIS and work... ;)

Ooohh....one more post for 6,000...

*NikkiBell*
03-10-2010, 08:50 PM
Are you supposed to be a Jerzy operator? ;)

cslittle999
03-10-2010, 09:58 PM
I could say the same things.

Ok...so my duties are different.;)
I'm assuming you are waiting for Pete to deploy you to Disneyland Paris. :rotfl2:

cslittle999
03-10-2010, 10:01 PM
I tend to check email and answer the critical ones on my days off. I do it less than I used to. Strangely I find it is the single days off where I do more email. Usually when we have a Canadian holiday that doesn't match up with a US one.

Disneybridein2k3
03-11-2010, 05:37 AM
Hey Baby, What you doin? :rotfl2:

Your job, not mine silly. I don't have the voice for it. I'm just a boring auto claims adjuster. No bringing my job home with me - other than my sense of obligation to work OT. DH on the other hand can be called back to work at any time even though he is shift work. If the bad guy gives his wrong name, DH has to haul his butt outta bed and head out to the jail to fix the paper work; and of course if there is an emergency and they are short-staffed, they call him in.

TeriofTerror
03-11-2010, 05:49 AM
You know what they used to say at the Disney Studios -- if you don't show up to work on Saturday, don't bother showing up on Sunday!

FlightlessDuck
03-11-2010, 07:28 AM
I don't consider coming in to work on a day off as having a "commitment or sense of responsibility". It's your day off. Do something else!

Not that I don't work extra hours or at home. I've done that for ten years. For about seven of them, I was working about 10 hrs/week from home (50 hours/week total). But this past July it just go to be too much for me. Now I work maybe 2 hours/week from home, and then only when absolutely necessary.

Cherinva
03-11-2010, 07:48 AM
I live within walking distance to my job, so when I do have time off, occationally I do have to go in and take care of things. My new boss, however, doesn't like any of us having to work on scheduled days off, so it's not too bad.

dalt01
03-11-2010, 10:55 AM
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SamIAm21
03-11-2010, 11:06 AM
I agree that in this current employment environment showing a sense of commitment to your job and work is a good thing! However, on the other hand, I was often the one that worked from home via the internet when I was sick, when my child was sick, I cut vacations short, I answered emails and worked in the evening when my family was watching TV and relaxing. That all seemed like a very "responsible" thing to do, until I got axed after 20 years of being responsible and commited to my work. Now, I wished, I would have sat with my daughter when she was sick instead of staring at the PC, I wish I would have watched some TV with my family and laughed, I wish I would have lingered at the dinner table instead of racing to my PC to make sure London got their transcript, Fed-Ex or were able to log into conference calls and video recordings of meetings.

I gave a lot of my time to that job at the expense of my family... for what?

gr8leg8
03-11-2010, 11:10 AM
what level of commitment or sense of responsibility do you have??

On behalf of the full time mom/dads/guardians out there...
Day off?
what is this you speak of??

Ultimate full time job,

but what I get in return for my efforts outweighs any paycheck
princess: