Why there’s no such thing as work-life balance and what to do about it
I’ve never been inspired by the idea of work-life balance.
It sounds like a false dichotomy and an arbitrary one. It’s the product of a
culture where we work too much, no?
Personally, I don’t separate between the personal and the professional.
I prefer to talk about the vocational. Not in the religious or technical sense
but as living from a sense of purpose and showing up in alignment with who I
really am no matter what the situation – living my own inner-voice.
Vocation (n.) From the Latin vocationem literally
"a calling, a being called".
Most of us, at least in the second half of life, are called
to live with more integrity and authenticity, shedding external expectations
and living from our own inner-voice. It can entail a radical career shift or
showing up differently in the job and relationships you already have.
I had a conversation with a bright young lawyer last week
who wants to shift into finance and was unsure about how to explain the shift
in interviews. I asked him why he wanted to make the shift. He said that he was
good at cross-referencing documents for loopholes and having an impact on deals.
He also happened to care about climate change. I played with the ideas and
suggested that next time someone asks him why he wants to do this job, he say
something like this:
“One of the greatest concerns of my generation is climate
change. I believe that with the right financial instruments we can create
wealth and reduce our carbon footprint. Unlike most other leaders who are only
focused on the big picture, I have an additional special talent for attention
to detail. I have a hawk’s eye for shaping the contractual language that
creates these financial instruments and can make the difference between
billions lost in money, biodiversity and health through carelessness and true
wealth. And I want to learn from the best along the way.”
He looked at me and said: damn, I wish I’d said that at the
last interview. We both laughed.
Of course, it’s not easy to speak words that are fully
aligned with who you are in a potentially hostile environment. There’s no guarantee
his interviewers will resonate with what he says. But it’s more likely that
they’ll respect him as an emerging leader and that he’ll find an organisation
that’s a great match in due course.
In other words, speaking from your heart - your inner-voice
- takes courage. But that’s how you can live a vocational life rather than have
a job that pays and a personal life on the side that you try and balance. You
can chase that kind of balance forever but it will never last.
The root of the word courage is cor -
the Latin word for heart.
In one of its earliest forms, the word
courage meant "To speak one's mind by telling all one's
heart." Over time, the definition of courage changed, and today,
we typically associate courage with heroic deeds.
But you don’t need big heroic deeds. You just need to hear
your inner-voice and take action from there. As a client reminded me last week,
I help her remember and live knowing that freedom and happiness are the by-product
of living courageously from this place.
Have a good week,
Amina
If
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