|
Categories
|
|
|
|
|
Work Is A Four-Letter Word
By
Eileen McDargh, CSP, CPAE
|
|
I can hear the jokes already
and most of them are not politically correct. Let me throw
out a word that we often don't attach to work and yet I
think it is a word of redemption, of contribution, of
achievement, of community, and ultimately, of legacy.
Here it is: LOVE.
Kahil Gibran proclaimed, "Work is love made
visible". I would further clarify his position by
insisting that a job is what you do for a paycheck. Work
is what you do for a life. It is that energizing,
all-encompassing activity that allows you to bring skills
to bear in ways that are satisfying beyond a pay period.
It is that activity that saves you from being a faceless
number in a mechanistic wheel-hence it holds redemptive
powers. It is that activity which makes a contribution to
a larger world order. It is that activity from which you
sense a measure of accomplishment and achievement. It
excites you. It gives you joy. It binds you to a community
of people who are stakeholders in what you do. Ultimately,
it has a ripple effect and the potency of a legacy for
those who follow.
"Ah come on!" you insist. "How about a
garbage collector? A waiter? A store clerk? Who is going
to love those jobs?"
Great question. And at face value, it seems that not every
employment opportunity has such grand potential. Just take
the money, leave it as soon as you can for greener
pastures. Screw those miserable bosses. Thumb your nose at
the customer.
And tomorrow you die.
That's it. Plain and simple. While you are looking for the
dream vocation, the better work environment, the nicer
boss, reality can step in and your one moment on the
Planet is gone forever. It's a reality made even MORE real
by current events.
There's an uneasy shift that has taken us by storm and
rattled our plod-along workaday world. Many are paralyzed
by the insecurity of the times. The terror of 9-11 and the
subsequent global aggressiveness pushed us over the edge.
With a wobbly U.S. economy, unsettled change continues to
bombard us. Mega-mergers boggle the mind with the endless
zeros streaming behind a behemoth's financial size. We
gasp at the number of employees who are cast off from a
consolidated giant. We see plant closures and layoffs in
everything from clothing manufacturing to banking.
Overnight web companies turn almost under-age youth into
millionaires and executives at age 40 are left scratching
their heads. Then, dot.coms fail, leaving bewildered
employees in the rubble. Wall Street meltdown, corporate
greed, and icon-like presidents who crash as fallen idols
make daily headlines.
Despite statistics that indicate employment is coming
back, there's pain and inaccuracy behind these cold
numbers. We are working more but feeling as if we're
earning less and living in time poverty. Affluenza is an
all too common word. The consistent notion that work
should be a 24/7 event is being challenged by a rising
number of strident voices. And with those voices comes a
cry for the most urgent answer to sustainable success:
finding meaningful work that makes an impact and lets us
live in the bargain. Answer that plea and we'll unleash a
productive and creative power akin to a tsunami.
In short we want to LOVE what we do, who we do it for and
who we do it with AND love the life we create outside that
work. That's the essence-the Holy Grail-the mysterious
work/life balance piece. Finding that Holy Grail is done
by parallel processing, working on two tracks. The first
track is to make work "work" for you in your
current situation.
Wouldn't it make more sense to transform wherever you find
yourself-even while continuing to search-so that if and
when you leave, there's a faint footprint of achievement,
community, contribution and yes, even the memory of a
beneficial interaction. Such a transformation allows you
to love yourself in the process. It keeps bridges from
burning and strengthens a network of relationships that
one day you might call upon.
The critical question becomes: how do you turn a
"job' into a "work"-into something that
gives you more than a paycheck? No, you might not be able
to alter the corporate strategic plan, paint the garbage
truck peppermint pink or change a boss from a toad to a
prince. But, there are specific action items you can take
within your sphere of influence. Too often, we expect
management to lead us in career directions, to provide us
with recognition, to make "it" a better place.
It's just like a marriage: there's responsibility on both
sides. Using the tools offered by Bev Kaye and Sharon
Jordan Evans in Love it. Don't Leave It (available at
major bookstores), you'll find a literal alphabet soup of
specific action steps to help you take ownership for your
life at work
Don't wait. Time is too precious to squander. You CAN fall
in love again.
(c) 2004, McDargh Communications. All rights in all media
reserved. Reprints must include byline, contact
information and copyright.
|
About
The Author
Eileen
McDargh, CSP, CPAE is one of top-ranked
women business speakers in the United
States. She's authored numerous books the
newest of which is The Resilient Spirit,
radio commentator, and serves on the Board
of Directors of the National Speakers
Association. You can find Eileen at http://www.EileenMcDargh.com. |
|
|
|
<< Back to the Article Index
©
Copyright 2004, ArticleJunction.com
|
|
|