u/mazokos

I hate my job

I hate my job.

I currently work as an export manager in a Lithuanian company and have been here for over a year. Before this, I worked in a U.S. logistics company as an Accounts Payable specialist, and I genuinely loved that job.

I decided to move back to my hometown in Lithuania and found a position in a large company here. The problem is, it’s a small town and job opportunities are very limited. Remote jobs are also hard to find in Lithuania, especially in Accounts Payable. That’s why I feel kind of stuck.

As I said, I really hate this job. My confidence has dropped a lot since I started working here. The work environment is stressful, other departments are disorganized, people are constantly blaming each other, and it feels like someone is always looking for a reason to shout.

I also received almost no proper training. I had just one day with the previous employee, and after that I was left to figure everything out on my own, piece by piece.

All I want is to leave and never look back, but right now I can’t do that financially.

I’m looking for advice from people who have been in a similar situation. How did you deal with it without completely burning out?

reddit.com
u/mazokos — 15 hours ago

I hate my job

I hate my job.

I currently work as an export manager in a Lithuanian company and have been here for over a year. Before this, I worked in a U.S. logistics company as an Accounts Payable specialist, and I genuinely loved that job.

I decided to move back to my hometown in Lithuania and found a position in a large company here. The problem is, it’s a small town and job opportunities are very limited. Remote jobs are also hard to find in Lithuania, especially in Accounts Payable. That’s why I feel kind of stuck.

As I said, I really hate this job. My confidence has dropped a lot since I started working here. The work environment is stressful, other departments are disorganized, people are constantly blaming each other, and it feels like someone is always looking for a reason to shout.

I also received almost no proper training. I had just one day with the previous employee, and after that I was left to figure everything out on my own, piece by piece.

All I want is to leave and never look back, but right now I can’t do that financially.

I’m looking for advice from people who have been in a similar situation. How did you deal with it without completely burning out?

reddit.com
u/mazokos — 15 hours ago