I-K wrote:That's called being an inhabitant of planet Earth...
True enough, unfortunately - however some places are better than others

I can safely say that working in a bar was a much more positive place with people striving to be their best than my years of driving a desk hehe.
Back on-topic - it just depends what your priorities are and what you want out of life - from what I've seen, a government desk job will make some people happy but most people depressed. I'd say just go into a small, private enterprise with growth opportunity and really work for your money - it feels good

I think the only time a job really becomes tiring is if you're not thinking and boredom takes you (or you're on your feet all day)

It's a psychological principal (according to my g/f who's from smarter stock than one such as myself) that if you're constantly thinking, it makes you more active and gives you energy to keep going due to the way your mind works and how it creates neural pathways which allow you to perform tasks better. If you're constantly challenging yourself and making new pathways, you outgrow your role and this will be reflected in your pay

That got deep.
Sometimes duty calls and you gotta do what you gotta do to get through to something better; if a government role is your 'something better', then go for it! If not, plug away until you see the opportunity that is and grab it. If you don't enjoy what you do, it shows everywhere and you become miserable and people will begin to hate you and you will smell. I guess that means you turn French

If there's a role you'd enjoy within the government sector, just go for it! Either way, government or private, make connections - loyalties mean a lot within business unless you associate within dodgy circles right from the beginning...