I came across a phrase the other day that is so
evocative, so delicious, that I had to write about it: “lazy girl job,” or, as
you might know it. @#lazygirljob.
Image by Amarily Moreno from Pixabay |
Now, before anyone gets too offended, it’s not about labeling girls as lazy; it’s not really even about lazy or even only girls. It’s about wanting jobs with the proverbial work-life balance: jobs that pay decently, don’t require crazy hours, and give employees flexibility to manage the other parts of their lives. Author Eliza Van Cort told Bryan Robinson, writing in Forbes: “The phrasing ‘lazy girl job’ is less than ideal—prioritizing your mental health and work-life integration is NOT lazy.”
The concept is attributed to Gabrielle Judge, who coined
it on TikTok back in May (which is why I didn’t hear about it until
recently). According to her, it means
not living paycheck to paycheck or having to work in unsafe conditions. She believes
job flexibility doesn’t mean coming in at 10 am instead of 9 am because you
have a dentist appointment; it means you have more control over your hours and
when you get your work done. If Sheryl Sandberg was all about “leaning
in,” Ms. Judge is about leaning out.
Ms. Judge explained to NBC News:
Decentering your 9-to-5 from your identity is so important because if you don’t, then you’re kind of putting your eggs all in one basket that you can’t necessarily control. So it’s like, how can we stay neutral to what’s going on in our jobs, still show up and do them, but maybe it’s not 100% of who we are 24/7?
“I’m only accepting the soft life, period,” she says.
Danielle Roberts, another TikToker and who describes
herself as an “anti-career” coach, told
NBC News: “And rather than calling the people who are divesting from
that system lazy, and telling them that they just need to work harder, we need
to talk about why it’s a trend in the first place and go one level deeper.”
She went on to explain:
We’ve seen that the 40-hour work week is now outdated. We can produce the same amount of work, if not more work, in a fraction of the time. So wanting to keep those butts in seats, and not just for 40 hours, but for 40-plus hours, is just really a means of control. If you hired them, you should trust your employees to do their job and do it well.
It’s not only the work week that is outdated, but also
the concept of loyalty. Ms. Judge told
NBC Los Angeles: “The whole lazy girl job thing is a thing because
it's a two-way street. Like of course this is attractive to employees, but
there's a reason why this was caused and that's because employers in general
just can't hold their weight when it comes to company loyalty like they used to
be able to traditionally.”
Hailey Bouche, writing in The EveryGirl, makes an even stronger point:
Things like work-life balance and reasonable pay shouldn’t be considered luxuries. We all deserve jobs that give us access to the benefits, flexibility, and salary that we need to live a fulfilled life—and having or wanting a job that allows us all of those things does not make us lazy.
Amen.
Image by Rosy from Pixabay |
But this trend is broader than Gen Z girls or even Gen
Z generally. A recent
Gallop poll found that 6 in 10 workers admit they aren’t putting in maximum
effort, and that their biggest complaint was workplace culture. As The Wall
Street Journal headlined it last week: Workers
to Employers: We’re Just Not That Into You.
The WSJ article cites a number of workplace
trends, such as more employers are offering the option to work remotely, more
employees are taking it, employees, employees are taking more vacation and have
more options for paid time off. And, perhaps as a result, the Conference
Board found that worker satisfaction rose sharply in 2022 and is now at its
highest point since 1987.
Another WSJ
article reported that companies that allowed at least one day or remote
work per week increased staffing twice as fast as those requiring full-time
office requirements. “One of the more straightforward
potential explanations is that people put a really high value on being remote
and generally having flexibility, so recruitment is likely quite a bit easier,”
Emma Harrington, a University of Virginia economist, told WSJ.
President Biden evidently
is missing out on the #lazygirlsjobs trend too, since he’s pushing
to get federal workers back in the office by this fall. Other organizations and
other CEOs feel
the same, wanting things to go back to “normal,” or at least more directly
under their control, in the office. But
that genie may be out of the bottle.
@lazygirlsrule
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There are plenty of
lazy girl jobs in healthcare, or, at least, ones that could be. “Administrators” – whether they’re billing
clerks, claims processors, marketing experts, or managers – far outnumber
people actually delivering care in every part of the healthcare system, and there’s
no reason many of those jobs couldn’t be made to qualify.
When it comes to the people
delivering our care, though, we want them to be where we want them when we need
them, for as long as we need them. Physicians, in particular, are known for
working long hours, being responsible for life-and-death decisions, and suffering
the stress with comes from all that. Well, no wonder physician burnout is a real
problem, as it is for nurses
and other front-line healthcare professionals.
Healthcare professionals haven’t fled their jobs in any
great numbers yet, although the warnings
are there. Healthcare doesn’t have its Gabrielle Judge yet, there’s no
#lazydoctorjob meme (that I am aware of), but the societal trends that caused
#lazygirljobs are going to impact healthcare too, and we better figure out what
we want that to mean.
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