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The Good Enough Job : Reclaiming Life from Work
Stolzoff, Simone ¤Ó Portfolio
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272page/140*216*25/372g
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9780593538968/059353896X
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  • "His straight-shooting style makes for a blistering takedown of American corporate culture. Workaholics would do well to check this out." ¡ª Publishers Weekly "If you are struggling with the oversized place that work occupies in your life ¡ª and how much of your identity it takes up, then this refreshingly different book is a good place to start." ¡ª The Financial Times ¡°A journalist makes a timely, compelling case for designing work around our lives instead of squeezing our lives into the space around work. It¡¯s a wakeup call for people who feel overworked and leaders who have lost sight of their humanity.¡± ¡ª Adam Grant, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Think Again and host of the TED podcast WorkLife ¡°Superb. A fascinating and deeply reported challenge to the idea that our work should¡ªor ever could¡ªbe the only center of meaning, self-worth, or community in our lives. The real-life stories fill the reader with the liberating sense that we absolutely could put work back in its place¡ªand that the result would be both richer lives and more effective work.¡± ¡ª Oliver Burkeman, New York Times bestselling author of Four Thousand Weeks ¡°The Good Enough Job is an incredibly propulsive read, filled with characters whose stories will be at once familiar and astonishing¡ªand it will absolutely challenge you to change the way you think about work.¡± ¡ª Anne Helen Petersen, author of Can¡¯t Even and coauthor of Out of Office ¡°The Good Enough Job is a super-helpful guide for anyone looking to renegotiate their relationship with work and to better fit their career goals into a happier, more fulfilling life.¡± ¡ª Laurie Santos, Chandrika and Ranjan Tandon Professor of Psychology at Yale University and host of The Happiness Lab podcast ¡°Simone Stolzoff provides an important corrective to the modern impulse to either villainize or lionize our jobs, arguing that it¡¯s okay for our work to be just one element among many that contribute to a life well-lived.¡± ¡ª Cal Newport, New York Times bestselling author of Digital Minimalism and Deep Work ¡°I couldn¡¯t stop reading The Good Enough Job. It¡¯s packed with sharp analysis about modern work culture and vivid, page-turning stories of people who have sought to detach their sense of meaning from their productivity as workers. I was startled to recognize myself. You will be, too.¡± ¡ª Vauhini Vara, author of The Immortal King Rao ¡°The Good Enough Job is a thorough, insightful, and much-needed reminder that we are not what we do at work. Stolzoff reveals why the modern world makes it so easy to fall under workism¡¯s spell¡ªand how we can finally disentangle ourselves from its clutches.¡± ¡ª Liz Fosslien, bestselling coauthor and illustrator of Big Feelings and No Hard Feelings ¡°Read this and give yourself permission to design a great life with a good job in it.¡± ¡ª Bill Burnett, executive director of the Life Design Lab at Stanford University ¡°In a dazzling mix of reportage, research, and cultural critique, Stolzoff expl...
  • Chapter Page Introduction xi 1. For What It's Worth 1 2. The Religion of Workism 21 3. The Love of Labor 41 4. Lose Yourself 61 5. Working Relationships 85 6. Off the Clock 111 7. Work Hard, Go Home 137 8. The Status Game 157 9. A World with Less Work 179 Epilogue 199 Acknowledgments 207 Notes 211
  • 1 For What It's Worth On the myth that we are what we do Sufficiency isn't two steps up from poverty or one step short of abundance. It isn't a measure of barely enough or more than enough. Sufficiency isn't an amount at all. It is an experience, a context we generate, a declaration, a knowing that there is enough, and that we are enough. Brene Brown Divya Singh was sitting in her college dorm room when her roommate's boyfriend said something that changed her life: "You couldn't get an internship at The Restaurant even if you tried." Divya was a nineteen-year-old Indian American culinary school student with sleek bangs and a single pronounced dimple under her left cheek. She was studying to become a nutritionist. Her dream was to design recipes for a glossy food magazine like Bon Appetit or Saveur, but that comment changed things. Cody, the boyfriend, was a tall, confident Midwesterner on the fine-dining track. Even as a student, he assumed the bravado common among male chefs. Little did he know, Divya was the wrong person to be told what she couldn't accomplish. Every year, one student from the culinary school Divya and Cody attended was awarded an internship at The Restaurant, which was widely considered to be one of the best in America. It had just received three Michelin stars, another accolade for its famed chef, Stephen Fischer, whose home adjoined The Restaurant's kitchen. The internship would be awarded by Randy Garcia, a faculty member at Divya's culinary school who used to work at The Restaurant. Garcia evaluated prospective students on their knife skills, solicited feedback from places where they had worked, and conducted interviews with each applicant. Divya had never worked in fine dining. But after she set her sights on The Restaurant, she spent the rest of her nights and weekends of the school year working in high-end kitchens. At the end of the year, Divya and Cody both applied for The Restaurant's internship. Divya got it. Garcia told me she was the most prepared student he had ever recommended for the role. Even after securing the position, Divya continued to go to Garcia's classroom to practice chopping onions, carrots, and celery in anticipation of the summer ahead. The Restaurant is a picture of culinary sophistication. The rustic stone building was a turn-of-the-century saloon before becoming a restaurant in the 1970s. When Fischer remodeled the kitchen, he told the architects that he wanted The Restaurant to resemble the Louvre-a mix of the historic and the contemporary. Every detail-from the cerulean front door to the "Sense of Urgency" sign that hangs below the kitchen's Vacheron Constantin clock-carries Fischer's fingerprint. The nine-course prix-fixe menu is $350 dollars a head. Most fine-dining kitchens are organized by the so-called brigade system, made popular by a nineteenth-century French chef who based it on the hierarchy of European military kitchens. The head chef barks orders that the rest of the kitc...
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