Conventional wisdom says that some live to work, while others work to live, but both extremes are undesirable.
Those that lose themselves in their jobs, or titles, or
careers, are lost indeed, for they filter life’s rainbow through the
prism of work and declare the world one colour, with themselves the
master of a single hue.
Those who find themselves chained to employment, whether
from desperation or fear, are prisoners of the darkness who see life’s
bright rays, at best, through the bars of impotence and boredom.
Both types are victims of insecurity and false identity, for work does not define us, but gives us the opportunity to define ourselves.
Career choices do not dictate our worth, but allow us to celebrate our worth.
Job titles say more about our sense of self-importance
than our ability to do important work.
Employment does not equate to the contribution we are
making to society, nor the potential we have to make a positive
difference in the lives of others.
It is a strange irony that the most valuable work is
least valued in our material world, while the most selfish pursuits are
glorified and richly rewarded.
We live in an age of inverted values.
As with Nature, so too with work: the smallest, humblest
and least visible are the most pervasive, productive and critical – the
very foundation on which the balance of life depends.
The modern economy is an attempt to create a neatly
manicured garden, sterile and devoid of the unorderly profusion of wild
growth:
Unshapely jobs are severely pruned every season;
Non-conforming workers are weeded out and discarded on
the refuse pile of the unemployed;
Surviving staff are fertilised with financial
incentives, trellis-bound through management-by-objectives, and sprayed
with market mantras to increase resistance to the buzzing, biting pests
of social and environmental activism.
For society to blossom, diversity must be allowed to
flourish:
Budding talents must be nurtured;
The acorn latent inside the oak tree must be cherished.
Only when survival is not dependent on growing in the
limited garden of formal employment will we witness the true bounty of
human nature;
Only when we create an environment in which the tender
tendrils of youth can climb towards the warmth of their inner calling
will we reap a full harvest of what is possible.
True work is service in action, creativity in motion,
meaning in the making.
2 On Work (Pdf print version)
Everyday Inspiration | The Poetry Of Business
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