| But rather than planning to create a future generation of workaholics, Dr Richmond said the new research could be used to study mental illness. |
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| In a nation of multitasking workaholics, insomnia strikes 127 million adults. |
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| They are incorrigibly racist, uncultured bigots, workaholics, crude and gross. |
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| Someday, all of us will have to become workaholics, happy or not, just to get by. |
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| Working too much takes its toll on people's health and relationships, yet most workaholics are hailed as heroes, or at least model employees. |
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| For starters, poor timing couldn't stop the three biggest workaholics in Hollywood from pumping out back-to-back releases. |
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| Women do not consider careers in IT because they think they are careers for geeks, nerds, workaholics or all of the above. |
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| In a profession that's notorious for breeding workaholics, burnout is always a threat. |
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| While processed dishes are becoming a major staple for the generation of non-traditional, Westernized, free-spending workaholics, the older folk are not so easily swayed. |
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| The Utsteinen workaholics have now completed mounting the exterior modules on the Station's East side. |
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| Indeed, even the Japanese, renowned as a nation of workaholics, have mandated a 25 day paid vacation per year. |
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| More than one-third of Canadians describe themselves as workaholics and experience high levels of stress and job burnout. |
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| In a statistical report published in March 2002 it has been said that Canadians are becoming workaholics day by day. |
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| Americans were becoming workaholics with the stress manifestations that accompany all work and no play. |
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| However, many people do this out of habit, or to give off the impression that they are such workaholics that they never have time for a real meal. |
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| Such people are often workaholics and have no wish to retire. The charitable rich do their bit to soothe the social tensions that arise from growing inequality. |
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| However, the data does not explain what the principal cause is: do people who tend to be workaholics become teleworkers more often than average or is the extra workload a consequence of telework? |
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| Yet, workaholics continue to work in the same compulsive pattern despite the harmful consequences. |
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| From the organisation's perspective, there are significant advantages of having intrinsic workaholics over extrinsic ones. |
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| In a society that holds workaholics in high esteem, Hodgkinson shows how to make doing nothing acceptable and cool. |
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| Wales is turning into a nation of workaholics who regularly work the equivalent of a six-day week. |
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| Miss Gardiner, a former headmistress turned life coach, has just announced plans to set up a support group for workaholics. |
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| They may become workaholics if not aware of their limits. |
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| First generation of workaholics who didn't know how to play. |
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| There are also lazy people who dream of being workaholics. |
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| And workaholics sleep less: inadequate shut-eye is associated with weight gain. Women gain more weight than men, Ms Abramowitz reasons, because they tend to substitute work for health-improving activities like exercise. |
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| The first temptation for us is to get lost in details and circumstances, without really knowing where we are going in the long run, easily loosing perspective and becoming expert workaholics. |
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| Workaholics has been on the air since 2011 and continues to produce stories about highly functional, stoned people. |
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| The raunchy humor of these Funny or Die clips run along the same comedic vein as Workaholics. |
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| Workaholics risk long-term physical and psychological ailments as well as an inability to nurture other relationships and domains of one's life. |
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| Workaholics and those who persistently suffer acute boredom are also targeted, which is good news for me since I've been a workaholic for years. |
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