Are you workaholic


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Are you workaholic


Are you workaholic
A day usually consists of several different episodes of working activity for the normal American citizen. But what declares whether someone fits the description of a "workaholic"? Workaholics strive for the desire to work hard each and every day. They endorse a feeling of need to be doing work on a constant basis. Does one having a tough work schedule and doing it because they have to make them a workaholic? This could be a good argument, but it seems only fair to label this type of person as a "workaholic" or a workaholic not by choice. How can someone strive to do repetitious work each day of the week? Key components of a workaholic are being energetic, animated, spirited, responsible, caring, and sometimes even charismatic. Workaholics are usually people full of life and their work ethic leads right into a sparkling personality. In some worse cases, too much work can take the best out of someone and make them not such a happy person. 
What makes up a workaholic? A workaholic strives to work and when they are done all their important work, they are usually looking for more. Workaholics are sometimes very charismatic. They are so full of life and are leaders in the work force. Not only are they working for themselves, but also working to make other people happy. A workaholic has a responsible mentality. Having the option to sleep all day instead of working may flirt with a worker's mind everyday. Workaholics won't ever let that option take them over. Workaholics know if they have a job, that without them there, not only will they suffer but other people will also. With out energy, people won't be able to work on a constant basis. Waking up every morning and going through an eight to twelve hour day can take a toll on the human body. Workaholics eat healthy and maintain at least seven hours of sleep a night to keep up consecutive busy work days. So how do workaholics get t...
On the seventh day, even God rested.
But for workaholics, the day of rest never comes. There is always one more email to read, one more phone call to take, one more critically important trip to the office that can't wait until Monday.

Weekends? Holidays? Family? As the uber-workaholic Ebenezer Scrooge put it, "Bah, humbug!"

"It used to be that I never went on vacation without my laptop and a couple of beepers," says George Giokas, who describes himself as a "reformed" workaholic. When he was starting his company, StaffWriters Plus, in the pre-BlackBerry mid-1990s, Giokas spent more than a few late nights and nearly every Saturday at the office, he tells WebMD.

As he confessed to the online edition ofBusiness Week in 1999, "I've struggled with the weekend issue many times, trying to figure out why I absolutely have to work then. It must be ingrained in me to the point of being a kind of addiction -- like going to the health club every day. If I miss one day, I feel awful."

But Giokas has since learned that the problems that pop up when he's away from the office will still be there when he gets back, and that what happens in the office stays in the office.

"I'm not the sort of person to bring home problems," he says, "and I don't dwell on issues. I get a pretty good night's sleep."



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