Of course
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When I posted I wasn't exactly sure of what response I'd get so thank you all for your comments, suggestions and experience - some more interesting than others!
Thankfully my meeting went quite well and it turns out my boss is quite supportive of finding a solution and has come up with a few suggestions, including getting in a junior developer to work with me which will help with the workload and handling some of the first-line support. I'm also got a doctors appointment to talk about why I'm not dealing with the stress so well anymore.
I am trying to keep off the alcohol (not a big drinker anyway), and do try and get out most lunchtimes for a walk along the seafront as a way of getting away from the office which has helped a bit. I've always been one to worry about what might happen and that coupled with a few system problems at work that have rumbled on for weeks as partially outside of our control - not that our clients see it that way! - and being 'always on' in case I get an alert the system is down is why I think its got on top of me and affected my sleep and my health generally. I know the work we do isn't life or death, but knowing that and convincing my brain not to get stressed seem to be two different things! I've also not been making sure I was doing enough other things outside of work (i.e. hobbies!) meant that my days consisted of mainly working and vegging out in front of the TV which is not a good work-life balance after a few weeks (if that makes sense) but its a hard cycle to break...
Its going to take time to sort everything out, but at least starting to talk about it is helping.
Onwards and upwards as they say!
Anyway, about that drink you seem to have forgotten about...
Thanks, though not sure about the proactive bit - it has taken me at least 6 months to do something about all of this...
Thanks, though not sure about the proactive bit - it has taken me at least 6 months to do something about all of this...
Thanks, though not sure about the proactive bit - it has taken me at least 6 months to do something about all of this...
When I posted I wasn't exactly sure of what response I'd get so thank you all for your comments, suggestions and experience - some more interesting than others!
Thankfully my meeting went quite well and it turns out my boss is quite supportive of finding a solution and has come up with a few suggestions, including getting in a junior developer to work with me which will help with the workload and handling some of the first-line support. I'm also got a doctors appointment to talk about why I'm not dealing with the stress so well anymore.
I am trying to keep off the alcohol (not a big drinker anyway), and do try and get out most lunchtimes for a walk along the seafront as a way of getting away from the office which has helped a bit. I've always been one to worry about what might happen and that coupled with a few system problems at work that have rumbled on for weeks as partially outside of our control - not that our clients see it that way! - and being 'always on' in case I get an alert the system is down is why I think its got on top of me and affected my sleep and my health generally. I know the work we do isn't life or death, but knowing that and convincing my brain not to get stressed seem to be two different things! I've also not been making sure I was doing enough other things outside of work (i.e. hobbies!) meant that my days consisted of mainly working and vegging out in front of the TV which is not a good work-life balance after a few weeks (if that makes sense) but its a hard cycle to break...
Its going to take time to sort everything out, but at least starting to talk about it is helping.
Onwards and upwards as they say!
Tell me about it. Up until four years ago I co-owned a specialist sub-contracting construction company. At one point we had two contracts where we were overdue £800k by over 90 days. Coincidentally one of them was on the Tyne Tunnel for Bouygues. Our operatives used to stay in a hotel in Whitley Bay. The stress caused by these delays in payment, and others, was at times, unbearable, but I had to accept it as part and parcel of being in the construction industry.
In a way they are the hardest problems to address. If you deal with something there and then it nips it in the bud. Problems that are 6 months old are much harder to raise. You lived with it for 6 months, You can leave it another day right? No-one else has an issue - It's been this way for a while. Before you know it, it's a year and even harder to bring up because it's the norm and another 6 months without proper sleep have passed.
I also read your above comment about your clients. I've have had some wonderful customers that have called me a Mike Hunt to my face and one who luzzed a phone - a big one as well - at me. There are some nasty pieces of work out there who love nothing better than a rant. My advice is to try not to take it personally. The 70s culture of shout, then shout louder is still out and about in some places and you just have to try an take the emotion out of the situation as it doesn't help. It did, however, take me about 15 years to learn that lesson. In my 20's some of those situations would have probably resulted in a fight.
I've come across a few of the aggressive types who almost violently rant against staff, suppliers, even clients who are slow to pay, and generally anyone that made their world not as they wanted it to be.
Each one an unhappy sole, beneath the bravado of macho boss. We just used to observe, then take the piss. No one was ever envious of their wealth, as it came at such a price for them.
When I posted I wasn't exactly sure of what response I'd get so thank you all for your comments, suggestions and experience - some more interesting than others!
Thankfully my meeting went quite well and it turns out my boss is quite supportive of finding a solution and has come up with a few suggestions, including getting in a junior developer to work with me which will help with the workload and handling some of the first-line support. I'm also got a doctors appointment to talk about why I'm not dealing with the stress so well anymore.
I am trying to keep off the alcohol (not a big drinker anyway), and do try and get out most lunchtimes for a walk along the seafront as a way of getting away from the office which has helped a bit. I've always been one to worry about what might happen and that coupled with a few system problems at work that have rumbled on for weeks as partially outside of our control - not that our clients see it that way! - and being 'always on' in case I get an alert the system is down is why I think its got on top of me and affected my sleep and my health generally. I know the work we do isn't life or death, but knowing that and convincing my brain not to get stressed seem to be two different things! I've also not been making sure I was doing enough other things outside of work (i.e. hobbies!) meant that my days consisted of mainly working and vegging out in front of the TV which is not a good work-life balance after a few weeks (if that makes sense) but its a hard cycle to break...
Its going to take time to sort everything out, but at least starting to talk about it is helping.
Onwards and upwards as they say!
It's hard to bear. This sector is rife with bigger companies using consultants and sub contractor to balance their cashflow. I'm sick of clients commissioning work and then finding that they don't have the funds in place to pay until construction funding is in place. I've started asking for an up front payment its the only way of reducing the risk. i hope your team had a lovely stay in the Bay! It used to be a real contractor haven with loads of B n Bs and a run of seedy bars! White vans everywhere you looked in one part of the town
I think the critical bit of your post is the 'always on' bit.
Somehow we've become enslaved by mobile phones and emails. Every place I ever worked in recent years made it mandatory to include your mobile number in your email signature. Add in the fact that you may be working on something in a team across multiple timezones PLUS you're expected to work on your train journey to and from work or fully participate in conference calls while you're driving round the M25. Oh, and any spare gap whatsoever in your Outlook calendar will be gobbled up by meetings.
You are completely correct that you are 'always on' apart from when you're asleep. It's completely normal that you should feel stressed, that's an absolutely human reaction.
Things you can do are to negate as many of these 'always on' impositions on your time and mental wellbeing. Block book at least 30 minutes in Outlook every day as 'private time'. Or lunch as we used to call it. Don't do work on the train, listen to music or read a book instead (the wretched train journey is quote stressful enough in its own right). Switch off your mobile out of office hours (some more enlightened nations actually have this right enshrined in law).
Basically seize back control over your time. Then let the company work around that. Or move company.
Wishing you the very best of luck.
I think the critical bit of your post is the 'always on' bit.
Somehow we've become enslaved by mobile phones and emails. Every place I ever worked in recent years made it mandatory to include your mobile number in your email signature. Add in the fact that you may be working on something in a team across multiple timezones PLUS you're expected to work on your train journey to and from work or fully participate in conference calls while you're driving round the M25. Oh, and any spare gap whatsoever in your Outlook calendar will be gobbled up by meetings.
You are completely correct that you are 'always on' apart from when you're asleep. It's completely normal that you should feel stressed, that's an absolutely human reaction.
Things you can do are to negate as many of these 'always on' impositions on your time and mental wellbeing. Block book at least 30 minutes in Outlook every day as 'private time'. Or lunch as we used to call it. Don't do work on the train, listen to music or read a book instead (the wretched train journey is quote stressful enough in its own right). Switch off your mobile out of office hours (some more enlightened nations actually have this right enshrined in law).
Basically seize back control over your time. Then let the company work around that. Or move company.
Wishing you the very best of luck.
I used to stay in the Grand in Tynemouth