Skip to main content

Daily Inspiration Quote by Dinah Sheridan

"After all, a job isn't worth doing unless you enjoy it"

About this Quote

There is a quiet provocation tucked into Sheridan's breezy certainty: she turns "work ethic" on its head by treating enjoyment not as a bonus, but as the admission price. Coming from an actress, the line reads less like lifestyle advice and more like a defense of a career path people still dismiss as frivolous, unstable, or self-indulgent. If the public wants to romanticize art while underpaying it, Sheridan snaps the moral ledger back in the worker's favor: the only honest justification for spending your finite life on a task is that it gives something back emotionally.

The subtext is a refusal of martyrdom. A lot of cultures admire the person who suffers nobly for their paycheck; Sheridan implies that suffering is not proof of seriousness, it's evidence of a bad bargain. It's also a subtle power move in an industry built on rejection, long hours, and precarious gig work. Saying enjoyment is required reframes "success" away from awards or status and toward agency: the ability to choose work that doesn't hollow you out.

The quote also carries a wink of privilege and aspiration. Not everyone gets to optimize for joy; most people are managing rent, childcare, or immigration paperwork. That tension is part of why it lands. It's not an economic blueprint, it's a value statement aimed at the moment when someone has options, or is trying to remember they deserve them. Sheridan's insistence makes enjoyment sound less like indulgence and more like a standard of dignity.

Quote Details

TopicWork
SourceHelp us find the source
More Quotes by Dinah Add to List
Enjoyment as Measure of Work - Dinah Sheridan
Click to enlarge Portrait | Landscape

About the Author

Dinah Sheridan

Dinah Sheridan (born September 17, 1920) is a Actress from England.

13 more quotes available

View Profile

Similar Quotes

Scott Adams, Cartoonist