Welcome to the workplace revolution: or, you know, the desperate battle for progress
Cosmopolitan India
|May - June 2025
For a while there it felt like we were really onto something with this “new era” of work. But are we sliding back to the status quo?
Release your job, release the time!' Two-and-a-half years later and Beyoncé's Break My Soul still soundtracks my commute when I just cannot. Most likely a Monday morning as I stand on the cold, wet platform, damp seeping through my trainers into my socks. But Bey's battle cry feels more like a dream than a reality. So I flick through my Spotify in search of the punk sounds of Lambrini Girls' Company Culture. 'Harassed in the workplace, my cold resting bitch face,' blasts into my ears as I squeeze between the bodies in the overflowing carriage of the (delayed) 8.05.
There was the Great Resignation of 2021, when millions quit their jobs in the space of weeks; then “quiet quitting”, “lazy girl jobs”, and even “bare minimum Mondays”, which encouraged us to put the least effort required into feeding the capitalist machine. The headlines say we're in the midst of a workplace revolution but, with a paycheck that struggles to stretch for most of us and a cost-of-living crisis putting more pressure on our bank balances than ever; I'm not convinced.
The thing is, careers hit a little different now. While our parents may have been working at the same company as long as we've been alive, for most of us, the idea of a “job for life” is basically a relic of the past. A survey by Open Study College found the average thirty-something has already worked as many jobs as someone in their 50s has for their entire career. The idea that our careers will nurture us—and pay us enough money to not just survive but thrive—has also been slowly disintegrating over the past decade. In fact, wages have been stagnant since 2008—pay today is 2.7 per cent lower than it was that year and, as a result, we're losing out on the equivalent of £20k (approx. ₹22,67,214) per year because salaries haven't risen in line with inflation.
Esta historia es de la edición May - June 2025 de Cosmopolitan India.
Suscríbete a Magzter GOLD para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9000 revistas y periódicos.
¿Ya eres suscriptor? Iniciar sesión
MÁS HISTORIAS DE Cosmopolitan India
Cosmopolitan India
Fighting Monsters With My Five Fake Boyfriends
As one of the 50+ million players of the video game Love and Deepspace, I gained superpowers and found romance. Could this be the solution to dating-app fatigue?
5 mins
November - December 2025
Cosmopolitan India
The Day I Bit the Apple
From academic purist to secret ChatGPT user, a writer learns the hard way about the perils of outsourcing their own voice.
3 mins
November - December 2025
Cosmopolitan India
Subiksha Shivakumar Wants You to Untag Her
The multi-hyphenate creative spills the beans on the politics of the industry, being on social media, and why 'model' trumps the 'actor-influencer'.
3 mins
November - December 2025
Cosmopolitan India
Nepal's Skater Girl Style
Meet Lora, Shristi, and Swati—three young women armed with skateboards, tattoos, a love for headbanging, and style that recalls a mix of '90s chaos and contemporary Gen Z elements.
4 mins
November - December 2025
Cosmopolitan India
'Femininity' Is Coming for Your Feminism
In the recording studio, Allie Beth Stuckey sits on a cream sofa, her blonde hair perfectly tousled. She leans into the microphone and speaks. She's chatty and fun, interspersing the serious with the silly and, at first glance, she's just like any other podcaster. In many ways, Stuckey's entire brand is built on being a regular 'girl's girl'. Her hair is impeccably blow-dried, she hates matcha, wears floral dresses, and throws in pop culture references like she's just another millennial on group chat. Her podcast is called Relatable and that's exactly what she wants to be to her listeners. But Stuckey isn't just here to chat. She's here to convert.
12 mins
November - December 2025
Cosmopolitan India
Gold Medals and Goyard Bags: Manika Batra's Winning Style
Manika Batra serves gold medals, Margiela fits, and a serious case for why table tennis needs its own fashion moment.
3 mins
November - December 2025
Cosmopolitan India
The Proof Is in the Picture
What makes a good photograph? These four photographers believe that it's all about instinct, rebellion, emotion, and reverence.
4 mins
November - December 2025
Cosmopolitan India
Have You Tried Aural?
Audio erotica is rewriting the rules of desire, one whisper at a time.
4 mins
November - December 2025
Cosmopolitan India
The Mega Matcha List
Eight cities, eight people, eight incredible matcha spots waiting to be explored.
5 mins
November - December 2025
Cosmopolitan India
Which 2025 Pop Culture Moment Are You?
Before you ask, yes, you absolutely can be a moment. Don't act like you've never wondered if you're more Sydney Sweeney's American Eagle or KATSEYE's GAP campaign.
1 mins
November - December 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

