Are You Defined by Your Job?
Are You Defined by Your Job?
Be Inspired to Strike a Balance Between Self-Esteem & Work
Society and culture encourage
us to study hard, graduate with stellar grades, get a nice job, and work very
hard on that job.
This charge is doubly so for entrepreneurs,
who are bombarded day and night with motivational quotes, videos, and real-life conversations that tell them to grind harder and harder.
The result is that once a person gets a job or starts a business, they are compelled to work more than is required or healthy. This becomes so serious that people start
feeling bad whenever they aren’t doing something.
We Are Addicted to Being Busy
Fear of Missing Out (FOMO),
anxiety around not being busy enough, and staying busy to avoid dealing with
negative thoughts or events are real issues.
Some try to cram their to-do
lists with countless tasks, no matter how mundane or trivial, while others
struggle to enjoy their work-free moments. This can become a real
addiction if we aren't careful!
Productivity tools, resources,
hacks, and all other related products are hot on the market these days because
everyone is trying to get as much done as possible within the shortest time
possible.
This is because the person who
snoozes not only loses, they becomes the loser. Whilst the person who sacrifices
sleep, rest, and even their health for more achievements is termed a go-getter.
Work ethic and self-esteem are now devastatingly tied together, and some people
think this is okay.
Society has put productivity on
steroids and placed it on a pedestal. The engine has been set to turbo mode,
and guess who is fuelling it?
You.
Does Your Job Define You? It All Started with Our
Names
A survey was taken about the
names of people.
The researchers revealed that
the most popular surname in Switzerland and Germany was Müller, which means
Miller (as in, a person who works in a mill, for example, someone who works at
a corn mill, or wheat mill).
In Slovakia, the most common
surname was Varga, which means Cobbler (as in, a person who mends shoes for a
living). And in the US, UK, New Zealand, Australia, and Canada, the most
popular Surname was Smithy (as in a blacksmith, locksmith, gunsmith, or silversmith).
When traced, these names dated
back to the Middle Ages. Back to the times when people specialised in a single
craft and mastered it, so much so that it became a family name. But why?
It was because communities were much smaller. A single craftsman could take care of the needs
of a community. This also meant there was no need for shifting occupations
because there was probably someone else who was already taking care of the
community’s needs in that regard.
The result of this was that
rather than looking for better careers, people just focused on doing the
best in what they were already doing.
They had plenty of work too
because there was no competition. This also meant that their children had a
better chance of success if they just focused on the field their parents were
already dominating; hence, they answered the names Smith, Muller, or Varga as
the circumstance may be.
And, because back then everyone
knew exactly who was responsible for a particular job, the reputation of the
family was tied to how effectively they could do that job. If there was war
looming, the Smiths could still produce 2,000 spares within a week because work
was truly a matter of life and death.
We Are Not Carrying Our Whole Community Anymore
Fast forward to the 21st
century, and people are still holding on to that mindset.
Whilst it is still good to do
your best wherever you find yourself, you need to realise that you are no
longer the only one doing that craft and that the fate of the community doesn’t
rest on your shoulders anymore.
You don’t have to tie your
self-esteem to your work anymore because the playing grounds have
changed.
Yes, it is good to be
dedicated, committed, and even passionate about your work. It is good to stay
focused and do your best, but what is not good is tying your personality and
self-esteem to your work.
The truth is that things don’t
always go smoothly in this hyper-competitive world we find ourselves in today.
And if you are tying your
self-esteem to how much work you can do, especially how successful it turns out
to be (because let’s face it, unsuccessful work does not count), then you have
set yourself up for an emotional rollercoaster.
One moment you feel on top of
the world, and the next you feel useless. And because you’ve once felt the
emotional high from succeeding, you would only be tempted to push yourself
harder – by working 90+ hours a week, and even on the weekends, day and night...
no days off.
Let's Slow Down
You essentially place your
self-esteem on something very volatile and tentative. Soon, you move from being
a hard worker to being a workaholic. You put your health, relationships, and
sanity on the line, and for what?
What would be the benefit of
all that work if you fall ill? How meaningful is the work if it makes you
question your purpose and worth every time some other company makes more sales
than you?
Don’t play that game. Take a
breather.
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