A
A difficult one. With the way you're working and the hours you commit to the business, my guess is that the combination of those factors (hours worked, stress etc) plus consumption of ciggies (and booze maybe?) mean that by the time you see 50 you may (stress may) have some serious medical issues which you won't welcome.andyoaks":37rypy8u said:I don't really class myself as old, I'm only 40, but over the last few years I am finding things really hard. This is making me sound like a negative person already but I'm not, I have quite a bright out look on things. I am currently snowed under with work and normally get up at 5 and am in the workshop for half past. I knock off at 3 for 15mins to pick the kids up then back in till about 6 when I come out for tea before going back till about 9ish. Then bed about 10 gives me 7 hours kip. Weekends are slightly better and I don't start till about 9 and just do 12 hours. It's a lot of hours I know but I have always done the same throughout my working life, I was taught if you want something you have to work for it and work hard. Days off have always been few and far between but thats just what I'm used to.
However recently it's getting really hard. I'm sure I have got some one elses legs as these sure as well don't feel like mine. Last week I went for the kids and was a touch early so sat it the van a few miniutes. Next I knew one of the other parents was banging on the window, I was fast on. A while since I went to the doc's as I thought there might be something up with me and I don't normally do doctors unless I think I might peg it. Doc's anwser, cut down my hours, reduce my stress levels and stop smoking, oh brill thats easy then :?
Making things worse is I'm on the same product day in day out, have been for the last 18 months or so and to press can't forsee an end to them. A very basic item, knocking 10-15 a day out with no thinking what so ever but good margins. So adding the monotony to the tiredness levels it's a wonder I havn't had to change my user ID, oh the 9fingers id has been used :wink: I read the posts of mailees and really don't know how he does it. No disrespect intended Mailee but in some of your pic's mate you don't look like a spring chicken Your either very fast or just super human :?
So after a rather negative sounding thread how many hours do you work & how old are you. How do you stay focused and motivated when you are on monotonous jobs. May be conformation that I'm not on my own might push me forward and get in front with the orders then I might even get a bit of family life back.
Sorry to be a burden
Andy
Blister":3r76v3zx said:Andy
All I can say is " Get A Life "
If you have a partner , do they remember you ?
And as for the children Do they have a Dad of just someone who picks them up from school
Sorry to sound harsh but you need to include family time
European working time directive suggest a 48 hour working week in my job but I do 40 or less
Time off is living time , Time at work provides a lifestyle for you and the family
So why not try 6 x 8 hour shifts for a week and see how thing go
andyoaks":29gx72gz said:thanks for the coments
couple of points
Kids/ wife
They know where I am, if they want me they come and stand at the workshop door :lol:
beter paying MDF fitted gear
I know very little about the MDF side of things. I see some of the work thats posted on here and some times think how long it must have taken and how much I would want to produce it. I then think would I be prepared to pay that amount if I were the customer and the answer is always no! Might just me me not understanding the mdf market. I clear a moneky a day with what I am on with and am not sure I could do the same with mdf.
booze, thats easy I don't touch the stuff, not even a sly one
staff
Been down that road. Before we moved house I have a bigger place and half a dozen staff. Turnover goes up but profit don't go up at the same level. At the moment I can't set anyone new on without some investment is H&S
what I do know is it won't be for ever, the product bubble will burst. I have found other items where there is a bit of a gap in the market and made good money but people cotton on and then the price falls if you get my drift. At the moment I have a money eating monster that can eat money far quicker than I can earn it [otherwise known as a house under restoration] and need to make hay while the sun is shining. May be when the bubble does burst I can sit back for a while.
Andy
Dibs-h":1gihfr7n said:Monkey a day - I don't think you'd make that doing MDF as a one man band!
andyoaks":1jexf552 said:Weekends are slightly better and I don't start till about 9 and just do 12 hours. It's a lot of hours I know but I have always done the same throughout my working life, I was taught if you want something you have to work for it and work hard. Days off have always been few and far between but thats just what I'm used to.
StevieB":3ieqrm4i said:Personally, I think you need to take a step back and decide what you want from life and how you are going to achieve it. You say you are clearing a monkey a day - by clear I assume you mean profit rather than turnover. With a monkey being £500 thats 3 grand a week, 12 grand a month and 156 grand a year. Think what other jobs pay that kind of salary - not many. Take a good look at what you earn, what you spend and how you might reduce the latter to be able to reduce the former. If its all being ploughed into a restoration then look at extending the time the restoration is going to take. People live to their means! Making hay while the sun shines makes good financial sense, but there is a limit.
Step back, even if its only a day off or a weekend away, sit down with the missus and decide what you want, how to get there is a reasonable state and then work to that. If you keep on at the current rate you WILL burn yourself out. The most important thing you can give your kids is your time - trite but true I am afraid. Take a step back now and think things over - the fact you are posting the question here means you know within yourself you cannot keep on doing what you are. You have admited it to us, now admit it to yourself.
Steve
JMcK":3ieqrm4i said:andyoaks":3ieqrm4i said:Weekends are slightly better and I don't start till about 9 and just do 12 hours. It's a lot of hours I know but I have always done the same throughout my working life, I was taught if you want something you have to work for it and work hard. Days off have always been few and far between but thats just what I'm used to.
I'm not clear from your post but if you mean 12 hours a day both Saturday and Sunday I would suggest you really should reconsider that.
Seven days a week ends up being unproductive. All very well for a short spell but in the end it catches up with you and performance drops of severely. It also isn't good for your mental state, forgive me for saying so, but it seems from your post that you are getting a bit depressed about it.
If I have misunderstood I apologise but, if not, for your productivity and, more importantly, your long term health one day off in the week would be IMO a must.
I'm 69 and retired ... if I'd worked the hours you do I doubt I'd be here now.how old are you and how many hours do you work
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