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comment | "parent_author":"",<br>"parent_permlink":"work",<br>"author":"redhens",<br>"permlink":"surviving-cubicle-life",<br>"title":"Surviving cubicle life",<br>"body":"![E90D5A36-8785-4AE4-9FDA-225CC8E84D6B.jpeg (https:\/\/cdn.steemitimages.com\/DQmW1i2ANxTeHqm1SB4R8xDSLvigE2UWLfk881g9ats94LY\/E90D5A36-8785-4AE4-9FDA-225CC8E84D6B.jpeg)\n\nI once read a book that carried the line,<br> \u201cFrom the cradle to the cubicle...\u201d The book was supposed to inspire people to lead their best lives by building on their natural strengths instead of trying to fix their weaknesses. The concept makes sense,<br> but this single sentence fragment didn\u2019t leave me feeling inspired. It left me feeling ... claustrophobic.\n\nI\u2019m not a fan of cubicle life. My coffee cup looks much better [set against the backdrop of a lake (http:\/\/steemit.com\/lake\/@redhens\/carpe-diem) than it does on my faux wood office desk (even though I\u2019m lucky to enjoy a cubicle with a view). But sometimes cubicle life is inevitable. And,<br> quite frankly,<br> given the challenges others face,<br> its a small struggle.\n\nI may not like my cubicle walls,<br> but I enjoy my coworkers. I have hot coffee and good tunes. And I\u2019m passionate about what I do. That\u2019s a tough gig to beat.",<br>"json_metadata":" \"tags\":[\"work\",<br>\"life\",<br>\"photography\",<br>\"coffee\",<br>\"writing\" ,<br>\"image\":[\"https:\/\/cdn.steemitimages.com\/DQmW1i2ANxTeHqm1SB4R8xDSLvigE2UWLfk881g9ats94LY\/E90D5A36-8785-4AE4-9FDA-225CC8E84D6B.jpeg\" ,<br>\"links\":[\"http:\/\/steemit.com\/lake\/@redhens\/carpe-diem\" ,<br>\"app\":\"steemit\/0.1\",<br>\"format\":\"markdown\" " | comment_options | "author":"redhens", "permlink":"surviving-cubicle-life", "max_accepted_payout":"1000000.000 SBD", "percent_steem_dollars":0, "allow_votes":true, "allow_curation_rewards":true, "extensions":[ |
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