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Why You're Doomed to the 9-5 Trap | Charles Bukowski


10m read
·Nov 4, 2024

People simply empty out their bodies with fearful and obedient minds. The color leaves the eye. The voice becomes ugly, and the body, the hair, the fingernails, the shoes, everything does. Does this sound familiar? A long day looking in front of the computer screen causes an aching feeling behind the eyes. Your legs turn to jelly after spending a long shift behind the cash register. Your skin becomes pale and gray with too much time under fluorescent warehouse lights. The nine to five continues to diminish our morale and humanity. Why are we doomed to this unsustainable way of life?

These were the same questions posed by writer Charles Bukowski in a famous letter to his friend John Martin. Born in Germany and raised in 1930s Los Angeles, Charles Bukowski faced a rough childhood marked by abuse, poverty, and bullying. His hardships fostered an early dependency on alcohol. Bukowski attempted to pursue a career in writing in New York after high school, but financial struggles forced him to return to LA, where he reluctantly spent almost a decade as a postal clerk.

This test for the nine-to-five lifestyle became a barrier to his creative aspirations. After his career with the Postal Service, Bukowski wrote an autobiographical novel about his working years, aptly titled "Post Office." Its publication launched his career, and he became a literary sensation at age 51. Fifteen years later, in his famous letter, Bukowski wrote of how nine-to-five work empties the body and drains the worker of any essential life.

It's hard to believe that the eight-hour working day came to be through activism between the late 17th and mid-1800s. The Industrial Revolution transformed the working world. Instead of working in the home and sustaining their family off of small trade loops within their community, people started selling their labor to companies. Let's use the textile industry as an example: mechanization meant clothing was now a good to be bought and sold, instead of made in the home, and laborers were required to work the factory floor. They would then use their work money to buy the required goods and services.

Working outside the home for a company was a massive economic shift, and it resonates in the modern day. Income and population rose as this chain significantly increased global living standards. What an average working day this time could range from 10 to 16 hours, and children were not exempt from the labor force. Rumblings of dissent reverberated among workers, as fatigue, sickness, and injury were common in the workplace.

So, in the early 19th century, activist Robert Owen proposed standardizing a 10-hour workday. By 1817, an even better proposal of an eight-hour workday gained popularity. Labor activists believed that eight hours of the day should be dedicated to work, eight hours to rest, and eight hours to recreation. This revolution improved working conditions and also productivity. Foremen and managers realized that happy, healthy workers were more productive.

But how much of your time off each day, or supposed to be recreation time, is used to prepare yourself for the next day? Does this tidy division of time work? In reality, your allotted eight hours for recreation per day quickly dissolves when you add meal prep, commuting, laundry, housework, child care, and errands into the mix. At the end of all that, do you even have quality recreation time?

Each day, you spend your evenings in front of the TV doom scrolling or playing video games, which is okay in moderation. But the demands of your work life and the activities that require you to be an optimal worker tire you out. You feel too drained to partake in hobbies or activities that would otherwise fulfill you. This is why many people who grew up enjoying books have stopped reading, and many others who would have liked to pick it up as a hobby struggle to find the time.

While we might not have a solution to our capitalistic demise just yet, the sponsor of today's video, Shortform, is the way to learn the ideas from all those books you've always wanted to read. Shortform makes the world's best guides to non-fiction books. They're like super-powered book summaries that expose you to all the key points in a book. One of my favorite books is "The Courage to Be Disliked," and while I've read the entire book through, I love going back and reading the key ideas on Shortform just so I'm reminded of its lessons.

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To get a free trial of unlimited access and an additional 20% discount on the annual subscription, join Shortform through my special link: shortform.com/aperture, or click the link in the description. Also, with the dawn of smartphones and wireless file sharing, it's easy for your workday to extend into the night. You're expected to be on the clock checking emails and finalizing presentations, even in your pajamas on the couch. Your work time bleeds over into your rest until you can't see where one role ends and the other begins.

Worse, the extra time you've put in at home doesn't exempt you from clocking back in the following day at nine. Even the self-help movement disguises its motives to sneak its way into making you a better participant in capitalism. You're only creating a more productive worker by molding a better you. Things like atomic habits, overcoming supposed laziness, and manifestation promise to lead you to your professional goals while creating a happy, healthier you.

Self-help gurus teach you how to do more with less instead of reassessing the root of why the system has left you broken. Writer and cultural critic Gia Tolentino takes this further in her essay "Always Be Optimizing." According to her, every aspect of modern life is geared towards creating a more efficient you. From workout crazes to salad bars, you never have a moment where you are off the clock in a world that strives to produce the best workers.

If you're interested, I have a video about self-improvement where I talk about this further. But if you spend most of your life working or preparing to work for a job you resent or don't enjoy, how can you expect to be happy? Yes, it might be hard to get out of bed in the morning or find motivation, but for some, discontent in the workplace leads to violent outbursts.

Ever wonder where the phrase "going postal" comes from? Well, in the late 80s and early 90s, there were a series of workplace shootings in U.S. postal offices across America, killing at least 35 people. The gunmen associated with these murders are classified as workplace avengers. They were often middle-aged white men facing economic anxiety, obsolescence, or possible termination from their job at the peak of their earning potential. They became resentful when they feel like they aren't making what they should be at work.

Their co-workers become symbolic of their fury, which results in violent behavior. Often, these homicides were caused by people diagnosed with mental illness or antisocial behavior. Most of the time, they were triggered by wanting to take revenge on a boss over the institution after a firing or reprimand. It’s called murder by proxy, where you transfer the identity of your intended victim onto anyone slightly associated with it. The shooters wanted vengeance on their workplace, and their colleagues were sadly representative of that place.

The Postal Service conducted an internal review to try and find the root cause of this discontent. Of course, there's not one specific reason that links to all of these instances of workplace violence; the nature of the work is a common denominator. There are many structural problems with the U.S. Postal Service that are too tedious to get into here, but one of the findings revealed that rural postal workers are happier than urban ones.

Rural workers create their schedules and are in charge of how they carry out their work each day. If they get all the mail delivered by the end of the day, that's a job well done. Urban workers, however, negotiate their workload each day with managers. In urban centers, the Postal Service must squeeze the maximum efficiency out of each worker. They'd rather hand out overtime and overrun the workers they have than hire more.

That one difference—choosing how you will complete your work for the day—is a determining factor of overall happiness. Work is whittled down to its most essential parts, and in industries with dwindling resources, when profit is king, there's no room to innovate your work structure to support workers better.

Something happens when workers become starkly aware of their place as a cog in the machine. While most people don't retaliate against the system in a homicidal rage, we spend so much of our lives working that it has an evident influence on our emotional health. Busting your butt to keep a job that you might want is taxing. In this situation, you must maintain cognitive dissonance or disassociation from yourself for 40 hours a week, because what's the alternative? To exist in modern society, you must generate an income.

In his letter, Bukowski likened work to slavery for this reason. Unless you come from immense generational wealth or you're at peace with a monkish existence, work is inevitable. Work that is isolating and repetitive, like in a warehouse or factory, causes your mind to wander, and without proper outlets, you can foster pent-up rage. Your body becomes like a machine, repeatedly fulfilling the same task—an instrument to generate money. Your work denies you your humanity, yet you're doomed to live most of your life in this state.

How can most people genuinely claim that they're happy with this system? The vast majority of us won't be as lucky as Charles Bukowski. Bukowski got a ticket out of his grueling manual labor job. Remember John Martin, the friend to whom Bukowski wrote his letter outlining his problems with the nine-to-five? Well, in 1969, Martin offered Bukowski to quit his job at the Postal Service and commit himself fully to writing.

At the time, Bukowski wrote, "I have one of two choices: stay in the post office and go crazy, or stay out here and play at writer and starve, and I've decided to starve." Within his first month as a full-time writer, he finished his debut novel. Martin owned a small press, and as a token of gratitude, Bukowski published with him throughout his illustrious career.

But how rare is that? Imagine someone approaches you and offers to fund your passion project for the rest of your life. You would probably quit your day job on the spot. Such an opportunity won't arise for most people. So, how do we find a way to cope with this unfulfilling work structure?

You can't really opt-out, but is there a way to lessen the burden of your nine to five? One thing you can do is say "no" when you can. Maintaining a proper work-life balance is crucial to overall health and happiness, but setting those boundaries takes practice. You have to know your worth as a worker and be willing to stand up for yourself. You must take your entitled lunch and break times and refuse to work after your contracted hours without any overtime pay.

Be cynical about the sanctity of your free time. During your workday, you are entitled to it as a worker, and the more workers unite to enforce these rights properly, the less likely employers will abuse them. Hence, the importance of unions. If you're a union member, ensure you're fully informed about what your union can do for you. Participate in union votes and strikes, and make sure your voice is heard. It's one of the only ways to push change forward in the workplace.

Some companies have taken the initiative to change their structure, and after all, our world looks a lot different than it did during the Industrial Revolution. The 40-hour workweek now seems absurd. Shorter, less demanding work weeks prove this arbitrary time designation is obsolete. In an experiment, companies in New Zealand dropped to a four-day workweek, which resulted in greater workplace happiness without sacrificing that much productivity.

Also, working from home, if your industry allows, frees up commuting time and enables you to sneak in some housework between meetings. Workers feel most empowered when they have some say over how their day is spent. Companies that allow their employees to make themselves as happy as possible during the workweek help pave the way for a better work-life balance.

It is also essential to reclaim your free time, and free time means just that—moments that you deliberately dedicate to absolutely nothing. Nothing in this context entails anything where you aren't making or spending money. Walking, picnics with friends, reading a book, even just staring off into space—those alone moments allow you to cultivate a sense of self outside of work.

It's unhealthy to lead your life with a sense of doom, but escaping the doom loop is difficult. Your time is precious and sacred, and the time you spend not working is even more so. Use it to reclaim your humanity and remind yourself you weren't brought on Earth to work. You are here to live the best life you can. Then, you owe it to yourself to create the best life for yourself, regardless of the constraints of the nine to five.

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