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Article created by: Kotryna Br

Sometimes, when watching an old show or a period piece, you get a glimpse of what offices were truly like in the past. Cigarette smoke, strict dress codes, and not a single computer in sight, for example. 

Someone wanted to hear from netizens “who are 50+ years old, what has changed the most about working when you started working vs working nowadays?” Older folks shared their best examples. So prepare for a blast from the past, get comfortable as you scroll through, be sure to upvote your favorite examples, and share your own if you have any. We also got in touch with LightningStrikes818 to learn more.

#1

Elderly man in suit working on laptop and counting money, reflecting on past work culture and experiences. Hardly anybody has a pension anymore.

whitewolfdogwalker , Andrea Piacquadio Report

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    #2

    Man in blue scrubs sitting with hands clasped, reflecting on work culture and the impact of a culture of fear. I've been working in healthcare for 33+ years. At the beginning (late 80s/early 90s), everything was patient centered. Now it's payment centered.

    millenniumxl-200 , Jonathan Borba Report

    #3

    Two colleagues discussing work culture in a modern office, highlighting changes in workplace environment over time. The people at the top earned a great salary and everyone else a good salary. Now the people at the top subscribe to the pirate life, take everything, give nothing back.

    TildaTinker , The Coach Space Report

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    #4

    Person's hands using a blue calculator on a desk with keyboard and yellow cup, illustrating work culture and office tasks. In the early 90’s I could get by on minimum wage full time. Now it would not be possible

    wanderain , Towfiqu barbhuiya Report

    #5

    Stacks of thick work documents with numerous sticky notes, symbolizing a culture of fear in old work environments. I watched office work go from sedentary to virtually immobile. We used to retrieve paper files, pass memos around, consult with coworkers in other sections and floors. Now everything is available on the screen in front of us, everything can be shared with a few clicks. It’s convenient, but so unhealthy.

    MathematicianWitty23 , Wesley Tingey Report

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    #6

    Two professionals shaking hands over a desk, illustrating work culture and professional interaction in an office setting. Benefits. I used to get 20 vacation days and 10/12 sick days. Now I get 20 PTO days. So, that’s a one-third reduction in benefits. I always purchase the best health insurance my employer offers, now the best is garbage. Twenty years ago, I was hospitalized, tons of tests and specialists, private room, final bill: $0. My kid was born five weeks premature, spent four weeks in NICU, final bill: $0. Now, if I go to the doctor, every single thing costs extra. All the benefits have been dramatically reduced, but profits skyrocket.

    richardmac999 , Mina Rad Report

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    #7

    Woman in black skirt and heels walking on wooden floor, illustrating work culture and office environment. Skirts/dresses and pantyhose required of women in many offices through 1990’s.

    hhhmmm0 , Pavel Danilyuk Report

    Bacon Tentacles
    Community Member
    8 months ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    SW dev here. I used to wear a shirt, tie, slacks, and dress shoes to work every day, starting in the late 80's. Occasionally there were business casual Fridays. Then business casual was the norm, and casual Fridays meant jeans. Then jeans every day. When I moved to Texas in 2013, it was cargo shorts every day. Then with COVID came working remotely and a T-Shirt and gym shorts every day. Been remote ever since, so...T-Shirt and gym shorts it is!

    #8

    Stressed healthcare worker sitting on couch wearing gloves and scrubs, illustrating work culture of fear and pressure. Doctor. Less likely to be literally worked to death due to so called “safe hour” rules where 23 and 26 hour shifts without sleep are now banned. Officially anyway. Also the newer residents are pushing back against unpaid overtime and taking hospital management to court and winning for unpaid wages. 

    feetofire , Cedric Fauntleroy Report

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    #9

    Man in office wear appearing stressed and speaking urgently on the phone, illustrating a culture of fear at work. For myself, it was a culture of fear. Sexist bosses who would harass female employees constantly. They didn't have to be male either. I had a female boss that would measure your skirt length by having you kneel on the floor, and would measure your hem with a ruler. More than two inches? Clock out, go home and change and then come back. Rinse and repeat. Many male managers took pride in being able to make women cry. There was public embarrassment if you made a mistake. Feeling like your job was in jeopardy at all times. Surprisingly, I don't miss it.

    WindyWood4 , RDNE Stock project Report

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    #10

    Person counting US dollar bills, illustrating work culture and financial aspects of jobs in past decades. Having to go to the bank to cash my paycheck

    Cndngirl , Karolina Grabowska Report

    Bacon Tentacles
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    At least the banks still have those pneumatic tubes at the drive-thru. SWISSSSSHHHHHH FOOP.

    #11

    Person typing on a vintage typewriter, illustrating work culture and fear in past office environments. Sending a memo meant typing something, sometimes on an actual typewriter. Physically passing said document to the people in the “to” line. They would sign their initials signifying they read it. Then pass on to the next. I remember people used to smoke cigarettes in their office.

    stuckinPA , Thom Milkovic Report

    Bacon Tentacles
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    And re-using the envelope the document was passed around in, until it literally fell apart.

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    #12

    Pregnant woman standing by crib in softly lit room, symbolizing reflections on past work culture challenges and fears. Maternity and paternity leave are new (US). When I started working it was still common to fire women who were expecting. Or require them to take very little leave. Women used to brag about taking only a few days off. Today the young men where I work get months off as paternity leave when their spouses have a baby.

    Plain_Chacalaca , Ömürden Cengiz Report

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    #13

    Female doctor in a white coat with stethoscope reflects on past work culture marked by fear and challenges. My first health insurance was Blue Cross, top level. Cost me nothing monthly and I had $5 copays.

    feckless_ellipsis , National Cancer Institute Report

    #14

    Two people exchanging a gift box symbolizing work culture and the shift from a culture of fear to support. Gifts from vendors were a thing. I used to get things like free bottles of booze from enterprise software companies we licensed from. That dried up years ago.

    doctor_x , Olivia Bollen Report

    #15

    Woman in glasses making notes and talking on phone, illustrating workplace culture and people’s work experiences. People used to answer their business phones.

    BornFree2018 , Karolina Grabowska Report

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    #16

    Man in a dark suit and pink tie looking away, representing work culture and professional environment. Men had to wear suit/tie to work every day and women had to wear what our company defined as 'interview attire' (professional dress/pantsuit). I remember when our first 'jeans Friday' was implemented, our manager wore jeans to support the effort, but they were ironed with a crease down the middle - hilarious. Now, for the same role at the same company, people work remote and wear sweats or whatever the hell they want.

    BrewboyEd , Nimble Made Report

    Bacon Tentacles
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Ahh. I commented on the wrong post. But, yep, I have watched the evolution of office wear for the last 40 years. Wild.

    #17

    I remember working as a summer-intern role at a place in 1988. Only a handful of people had computers, and they were excited to get their first laser printer. No network, so people would come to the desk of the person the printer was hooked up to (parallel port) and ask them to print stuff. Then in the 90's, there was a network printer on every floor of an office building. Nowadays, printers are not used very much at all.

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