“Lazy Girl Jobs”: This Is Not the Revolution We’re Looking For

<p>Just as soon as the sun set on &ldquo;Boss Babe&rdquo; and &ldquo;Girl Boss&rdquo;, the social media sun rose on &ldquo;lazy girl jobs.&rdquo; Taking over TikTok at an incredible rate is the notion of seeking jobs, mainly by GenZ women, that are completely remote, low-stress, high paying, end at 5pm, and devoid of meddling bosses.</p> <p>On the surface, I completely understand the concept and its appeal. Last year, I quit my 22-year, well-paying career that came with a 112-mile round-trip commute and an excruciating work environment, in exchange for starting my own creative business so I could work whenever I wanted, wherever I wanted.</p> <p>&ldquo;Quiet quitting&rdquo; opened the door and held it open to usher out hustle culture. It needed to go. We lived far too long being told by well-groomed 20-something men that if we weren&rsquo;t getting up at 4am to &ldquo;rise and grind&rdquo; for 14 hours a day to build our empire, we would never amount to anything.</p> <p>A culture shift is necessary. &ldquo;Lazy girl jobs&rdquo; is not the culture shift we&rsquo;re looking for. In short, adding a gender tag to any part of women&rsquo;s work experience is degrading and sets women back more than it empowers them.</p> <blockquote> <p>The last thing women need right now is false empowerment cloaked in a cute saying destined to be emblazoned on dozens of shirts in Etsy shops exactly 14.9 seconds after I publish this piece.</p> </blockquote> <p><a href="https://vanessatorre.medium.com/lazy-girl-jobs-the-cutesy-term-no-woman-needed-1a95f81c9c27"><strong>Click Here</strong></a></p>
Tags: Lazy Girl Jobs