The Great Resignation Continues
Amid cries from hungry babies and Bitcoin bros going broke these last few weeks, you may have
missed the report the Bureau of Labor quietly announced on May 3. In it, they reported that 4.5 million
people quit there jobs in the the first quarter of 2022.
What that mean is, just in case you forgot about it, The Great Resignation is still going strong.
And while pundits and prognosticators all want to blame inflation and child care costs for the fact that
Americans collectively are saying “take this job and shove it”, the people we spoke with this week say
it isn't about the cash or the kids, its about the quality of life.
John Kenton of Ticaboo, Utah was one of the 4.5 million quitters in early 2022. He cut ties with his
employer at Lake Powell and found work quickly at the only other major employer in a town of 276
people set at the foot of the Henry Mountains in Southern Utah.
“Look you guys can pay me $20 an hour”, says John, “but if I feel like garbage I'm not gonna sit there
and (expletive deleted) work. I took a pay cut to come here, because it's peace of mind.”
Thor Odinsun of Lake Powell, Utah agrees saying, “My niece made more then me on unemployment
for her, "part time job at the zoo" then I made working at the hospital through all this. I'm burnt. I quit
the hospital, took six months off, and now I work at a gas station 3 days a week and am working on a
YouTube career. If anything I have learned that doing what needs to be done, really is just a way of
saying that I shouldn't respect myself & shut up. So why bother working for someone else, when if I do
I am broke as a joke, or if I don't, I am broke as a joke. I'll do the minimum to pay the bills & work on
myself now.”
Odinsun quit his full time job in early 2021 when the Great Resignation was just emerging from the
clouds of the pandemic. He bought a boat to live on full time on Lake Powell in the middle of the
Southwest desert, launching his YouTube channel called “Explore with Thor”. He just reached a peak
subscriber count of 1520 subscribers which puts him now in a category where he can monetize his
channel and derive an income.
Both men agree that money was the major motivator in the days of Gordon Gecko, and the idea that
Wall Street dividends and a pile cocaine signaled success. In the wake of Pandemic however, the ever
sliding quality of life for middle America and a paradigm shift in the idea that work is what you do to
survive, but not to live, both men agree that a paycheck will only go so far to motivate an employee
these days.
Ann Curcio of Bridgeport, CT recognizes that something is wrong with an economy that screams that
they need workers but fails to connect workers with work. Her work as a job coach and employment
counselor gives her a unique perspective from both side of the equation.
“I have been working at the American Job Center for the last 3 years. There are so many stories on both
sides. Employers are screaming for help but the new hiring practices are sabotaging the hiring of
people. I experienced this first-hand when I was interviewed on the computer through a robo-call.
Companies have taken the human out of "human resources" and it's just not the same. I have been an
Employment Specialist, Job Developer, Career Counselor, all things employment for 30+ years. I've
never seen anything like it.” says Curcio.
And maybe that's just it. The human side of human resources has gone missing under the concept that a
paycheck is enough to motivate another human to do things. Kenton thinks so, “ The pay raise was
nice, I'm not gonna lie, but the fact that everything got worse after that,... yeah,...they can keep that.
Like I said the money was nice but is it really what talks?”
Big Companies and small business alike continue to struggle to keep employees and as long as they
think a paycheck is enough to keep workers happy they will continue to struggle. The emergence of the
Metaverse as a economic powerhouse combined with the idea that now that America has gotten a
chance to work from home, a paycheck is cold comfort, means the Great Resignation will continue.
Fries will go unmade, ice machines will stay empty and the trash will continue to pile up, all while the
pundits and prognosticators continue to say the Great Resignation is a paycheck issue. Perhaps both
Wall Street and Main Street will wake up when they realize, they can pour money on the problem but
until they see that the middle American working class is made up of humans who have lives, families
and dreams, we won't see a change in the tide of employment.
Sources:
John Kenton,