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Do You Work to Live or Live to Work?

I’m about to say some things that might be heretical to my fellow Americans. My apologies in advance, but I’m about to question one of our common shared religious beliefs: the belief that we should live to work. I would, after going through my own workaholic phase, respectfully suggest we reverse that behavior

Living to Work

From 2003 to 2012, I can say with reasonable assurance that I became a workaholic. After finishing the master’s degree, I was at least pursuing the career I wanted, doing work that was challenging me and stimulating my mind. There is nothing wrong with that, per se. Sadly few Americans enjoy the luxury of enjoying what they do. The advantages of living to work, if you’re in that situation include:

Sounds great, right? Certainly any manager, peer, or customer would welcome such an attitude and related work ethic. However, such a work-focused life can have downsides, such as:

Working to Live

I picked up some of this attitude from a vacation in Europe back in 2009. Given three weeks with nothing to do but explore, look at pretty things, and try new/exotic food, I grew to really enjoy my leisure time in a way that short three-day or four-day weekend jaunts just couldn’t capture. And much to my manager’s dismay, I came back to the States  delivering products somewhat slower than at my usual blazing-fast rate. I got reacquainted with the willingness to embrace personal time when I found myself underemployed and looking for work as a freelancer.

Vacations can make managers crazy. They lose a productive person for X number of days and then the person can come back not as motivated. (Well, Mr./Ms. Manager, perhaps you’d prefer your employee/contractor burned out and out on sick leave?) In short, longer vacation are subversive to American workaholism because they give the vacationer time to put work in its proper perspective, and that perspective usually says, “You know what? There’s more to life than the job.” So here’s how a person working to live operates:

Fear not, leaders and managers. I am not suggesting that your employees and contractors slack off. I am suggesting that if you find that you really, REALLY like your job–to the exclusion of all other things in your life–that you take a vacation and think it over. In the end, how do you want to be remembered: one of those people who was known only through their work or one of those people who can be remembered fondly for more than one thing? Just think about it.

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