If a
workplace expects the majority of its
employees to be available at all hours or to finish work at home, I call that tyranny. Possible
exceptions include high-level leaders in times of crisis. If employees cannot let go of their workplaces and
must be connected to them and their work at all times, I call that idolatry,
especially if there is a certain amount of arrogance attached to the worship of
work. These are the people who could choose not to idolize their jobs, but they
choose otherwise. Not being able to let go of work can also be a form of addiction. The latter can sneak up on
employees after several months of taking work home because they are interested
in finishing up an interesting project or because they want the answer to the
question now. And taking work home
every now and then, by choice, is
much different than being forced to do so by your workplace. But over time, the
results can be the same. Employees become slaves to their work and to their
workplaces. They cannot put their work aside; it preoccupies them to the point
of nervousness and anxiety, which is not healthy in the long run. This happened to me a number of times during
the past twenty years, I would take work home and stay up to all hours in order
to complete it. But what happened was that one project would get finished, and
then two more would take its place, and so on. My point is that we will
never be finished with our work. It
will always be there waiting for us the next day. It is absolutely fine,
totally ok, to pick up the next day where we left off the day before, after an evening of rest, relaxation and a good night’s sleep. It is important to have balance in our
lives. More to the point, it is important to maintain balance in our lives, because it is so easily lost to or disturbed by workplace tyranny, idolatry, or addiction. And that means shutting off the
phone, not looking at work emails, not 'checking in', and not being available; no
matter how much it plagues us (or tyrannical workplaces) in the beginning. It
means cutting the cord and not worshipping on the altar of work. The rewards
are that we find ourselves again in the process of deprogramming ourselves, and
we find balance in our lives. It does not mean that we no longer enjoy
our work, rather that we enjoy it within the context of a balanced life.
Showing posts with label idolatry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label idolatry. Show all posts
Tuesday, January 22, 2013
Finding balance
It seems to
me that the lines between our personal and work lives are becoming more and
more blurred. They may not even exist for some people. I think much of it has
to do with the prevalence of technology and social media and how easy these
make connecting to others at all hours; we can be connected 24/7 to family and
friends, so why not to colleagues and bosses as well? I know employees who can
never let go of work, or vice versa--their bosses and workplaces can never let
go of them. These employees leave their workplaces, go home, eat dinner, and
work some more, sometimes right up until they go to sleep. Or they accept phone
calls and answer text messages from bosses, colleagues and/or clients the
entire evening. They never shut their phones off; they check their work emails
constantly. They are on when they
should be off; they are available to
their workplaces when they should be doing other things. Those other things
include having a personal life, a family life, a social life, a hobby or two,
or doing volunteer work, or maybe just time out for meditation, relaxation,
reading a good book or watching a film. The odd thing is that these people travel to an actual workplace each day; they do not work at home. Somehow they have a harder
time physically and mentally separating themselves from their workplace than
many of those I know who work at home or who work several days a week at home. I
am not sure why that is; it would certainly be worth studying. It seems as though working at home forces those who do it to make rules for when they are available and when they are not, and they have learned to enforce those rules.
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