I remember when I first started working. My father, a financial manager, set out to help me, an artsy kid, understand time and money: "Brian, there are 40 hours in a work week," he would begin. "Now multiply that number by 52 weeks and you arrive at the number 2080, the number of hours you will work in a year..."
Now, unless you're an accountant bent on minimizing strokes on a calculator, chances are good that you've never thought to use 2080 as a standard of measurement. Yet, we have all, at one time, believed in this standard.
On career day at school, we were taught as children that 40 hour work weeks awaited us upon entering "the real world." Annual salaries would grow as we pursued our dreams and moved up the ladder; onward and upward. Americans have always intrinsically known what a work year should be: 2080 hours.
And yet, to this day, I have never experienced this standard. I have had jobs; I have had careers. I have made very little; I have made a whole lot. I have worked an hour shift; I have worked a 16 hour day. I have labored at sunrise, at sunset, domestically and abroad. I, like so many, have even climbed the ladder and fallen off.
Doubtless, many have experienced the standard or still do. But the number 2080 is from a different time, bordering on the legendary. So why talk about it at all?
We owe it to each other to do so.
It was a promise that was hard won before it was broken. And while a lot of attention continues to be placed on how it was broken, who broke it and why, these energies are misguided.
We all deserve at least the standard. We can provide it for others and they can provide it for us. Work doesn't need to all come from a particular place or from a particular few. It can come from you.
With your help, I will work 2080 hours this year. It is a tangible goal; an attainable goal. And it will be met through our dedication and hard work.
Each Friday this year, I will post my progress and our stories on the blog.
I'm waiting for your email. I'm looking forward to helping you out on our next gig.
Can't wait, in fact.
Let's make it happen.
Yours Truly,
Brian D. Moses
Contact: moses.brian@gmail.com
Previous Blog: http://brianbouken.blogspot.com/
Boston area or beyond: We can work it out!
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