And 3 steps you can take to solve the problem
By Katherine Wintsch, Working Mother
If you feel like punching your computer, you probably are in an unhealthy relationship with your job.
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By Katherine Wintsch, Working Mother
Is the relationship you have with your job a healthy one? Do you feel fulfilled? Do you feel valued and respected? Do you look forward to spending time with your job? These are important questions and ones we rarely ask ourselves. Why do we assume that because we’re getting paid to do a job that it’s OK to be unhappy? I hear this all the time in the workshops I run for working parents.
[post_ads]It’s as though we’ve resigned ourselves to the fact that we sacrifice 40 to 60 hours a week of time and happiness in exchange for cash to pay our bills … and that’s all one should really expect out of life.Yes, collecting a paycheck is vital for survival in most parts of the world, but being unhappy along the way is not a prerequisite. Being unfulfilled is not a clause in your employee contract.
The relationship you have with your job is one of the most important relationships you’ll build in your lifetime. If you work full time, you’ll spend more time with your job than you do with your children or your spouse.
So, let’s consider these two telltale signs that your relationship with work could use some help:
[post_ads]It’s as though we’ve resigned ourselves to the fact that we sacrifice 40 to 60 hours a week of time and happiness in exchange for cash to pay our bills … and that’s all one should really expect out of life.Yes, collecting a paycheck is vital for survival in most parts of the world, but being unhappy along the way is not a prerequisite. Being unfulfilled is not a clause in your employee contract.
The relationship you have with your job is one of the most important relationships you’ll build in your lifetime. If you work full time, you’ll spend more time with your job than you do with your children or your spouse.
So, let’s consider these two telltale signs that your relationship with work could use some help:
1. You hide the hard parts of your life.
You spend all night catching your son’s projectile vomit in your lap,
but when your boss asks how you’re doing the next morning you grin from
ear to ear and shout, “Great. I’m doing great!” Most mothers excuse this
behavior by saying you don’t want to burden your boss with your
problems, but according to the women in my workshops, the truth is you
don’t want your boss to think you’re weak. Think about it this way: If
you lied to your spouse all the time you probably wouldn’t say you were
in a healthy relationship.
2. You give up personal time for work, but rarely consider giving up work for personal time.
You don’t blink an eye at sacrificing dinnertime or family time to get
something done for work. But you’d rarely consider leaving work in the
middle of the day to do something for your home life—like going to the
grocery store, getting a pedicure or picking up new sheets because your
daughter has the stomach flu.
That last one hit home for me recently. I adore my job (I should; I
created it), but old habits die hard. I was in California for a
conference. I had a few hours to spare before I hit the stage, so I
decided to head for the hills for a hike.
Despite the breathtaking beauty around me, I couldn’t help but feel a
tinge of guilt for cutting out of the virtual office I’d set up in my
dark and dreary hotel room. While climbing the mountain, I checked my
phone repeatedly to make sure I was available if anyone needed me via
text or email.
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Case in point, on my flight home, I thought absolutely nothing of the
fact that I worked for five hours straight on the plane. In other
words, I felt guilty about taking a three-hour hike on a Wednesday, but I
found it perfectly normal to work for five hours on a Saturday. Not an
ounce of guilt there.
We find it so easy to subtract personal time for professional pursuits, yet it is nearly impossible to do the opposite.
Why is that? I believe it’s because we often value our contribution
to our jobs more than we value our contribution to ourselves. And that,
my friend, is an unhealthy relationship.
Healthy relationships are built on honesty, respect, and compromise
in equal measure from both parties. Given that litmus test, the same
test you’d administer to other relationships in your life, are you in an
equal partnership with your job?
Here are three steps to getting your relationship with your job on the healthy side of happiness.
1. Subtract time from your professional life. If
you need a pedicure before stepping out in public again or you need to
visit three thrift shops to track down the ingredients for your
daughter’s Halloween costume, why not consider running those errands on a
Tuesday during lunch rather than a Saturday afternoon?
2. Summon the courage to ask for help. One of the reasons I was overwhelmed in my previous career
was because I was terrified of asking for help. I thought it would make
me look weak. Once I finally realized I needed help more than I needed
to appear perfect, I started meeting with my boss once a week asking for
advice and direction. We both ended up loving the experience.
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3. Be willing to leave. In my years of research with
women, I’ve noticed a trend among the working women I meet. Those who
are successful and happy are the ones willing to walk away from
something—a bad husband, company or boss—in order to find that
happiness. They believed in themselves more than they believed in
staying in a bad situation.
It’s time to start treating this relationship as a real relationship.
Katherine Wintsch is a working mother of two and intimately
familiar with the highs and lows of trying to keep it all together. As
CEO of The Mom Complex,
she studies mothers around the world and helps businesses develop
better products and services to meet their needs. Read Katherine’s
workmom blog, In All Honesty, follow @kwintsch, or visit The Mom Complex. Also see her TEDx talk on motherhood.
Read more from Working Mother:
- I'm a CEO Mom and I'm Here to Tell You: You've Got No Reason to Feel Guilty
- 6 Skills Every New Mom Should Claim On Her Resume
- Actually, Women Are MORE Ambitious After Having Kids
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