Work-Life Balance: A Conspiracy of Optimism
Work-Life balance is, at
best, a fabrication. At worst, a cruel
hoax.
It’s time to stop believing
all the hype. As adults, we well
understand that it’s never been a question of balance. It’s always been a
question of choice. As the Spanish proverb reminds us: “Take what
you want, says God, just pay for it.”
Living with
the Consequences
Sharon Edelstein has a young daughter named Rebecca. Sharon came home from work one day and found her
jumping on the bed and told her to stop - she was going to get hurt. “I won’t get hurt” Rebecca said, and
continued bouncing. Her mother repeated
the warning and added that she might also break the bed. “No, I won’t,” Rebecca insisted. Her mother gave up. “Fine,” she said. “Do what you want. You’ll just have to live
with the consequences.” Rebecca
immediately stopped bouncing. “I don’t
want to go and live with them, Mommy,” she said. “I don’t even know who the Consequences are.”
As the ancient seers stated
so well, we don’t get to do everything in a single lifetime. We merely get to make choices. Not all choices. Only some. And we pay a price for the one’s we choose. Sort of like being at a buffet luncheon
without your cardiologist. You can eat
anything that’s available; you have only to deal with the aftereffects.
Growing old gracefully provides
more than ample opportunity to get clear about what we consider important and then
make our decisions accordingly. In this
journey called life, we’re all free to do whatever we want. And like Rebecca, we need only live with the
consequences.
But don’t expect to get balance. What we’ll get is stress: that dynamic tension of trying to creatively
live out our lives in a less-than-perfect world. And we’re required to do it all as frail,
flawed and frightened mortals.
Want a high-flying business
career? Go for it.
Might you desire to get
married, raise a family and live in conjugal bliss? Good for you.
Maybe you’d prefer to use
your artistic talents and create a world of new possibilities? God bless.
Perhaps you’d want to be
independent and care free? I’m envious.
But if you expect to have it
all, get ready to play center stage
in your own exciting Greek Tragedy.
Finding Help
in Unusual Places
I’ve
got a wife who works full time and two teen age boys who are experts at
disrupting the status quo. I spend most
of my days behind a desk in a corporate job. I haven’t yet found any balance. Mostly, I’ve found chaos. But alas,
on a good day, some insight.
I
no longer look to Jack Welch or Oprah Winfrey to give much help in discerning
life’s mystery. Rather, I look to the
poets. Freud got a few things right and
he was certainly on to something when he said: “Everywhere I go, I find a poet has been there before me.”
Making choices and living out the inherent tension it creates requires
a focus on “being” rather than “doing.” The ability to be silent, ponder the
deeper possibilities and creatively craft a life-response are aspects of
maturity more closely akin to the work of a Poet than a CEO.
Fostering this poetic outlook requires a personal discipline that may
not be to everyone’s liking. For those not yet ready to embrace it but prefer
an addiction to cell phones, e-mails and non-stop meetings, e. e. cummings
offers some practical words of advice:
Poetry is being, not doing
If you would follow,
Even at a distance,
The poet’s calling,
You’ve got to come out of
the
Measurable doing universe
Into the immeasurable house
of being.
Nobody can be alive for you.
Nor can you be alive for
anyone else.
If you can take it, take it
and be,
If you can’t, cheer up and
go about
Other people’s business, and
do and undo
Until you drop.
Wasting Time:
a Portal to the Divine
There’s been a spate of
books about Atheism surfacing of late on the New York Time’s Best Seller list,
but I don’t think it’s gaining broad acceptance. For most people, it’s not a practical
choice. It seems Henny Youngman’s
experience continues to hold sway: “I thought about becoming an atheist, but I
gave it up. There were no Holidays.”
The real threat for modern folks
is not a lack of belief. It’s a lack of
time. We’re so busy being productive and
trying to get balance in our lives that we’re in danger of missing the Divine
when He shows up.
Being busy may work wonders
for our Professional life, but it wreaks havoc on our Interior one.
If we want to find some
semblance of sanity and advance in our Spiritual Journey, we may need to slow
down, risk being less productive and indulge in the ancient rite of “Wasting
Time.”
In my earlier days, I spent
15 years in a monastic community as a Catholic priest. I remember once reading about “The Good
Samaritan Experiment” with 40 seminarians at Princeton Theological
Seminary. After waxing eloquently about
their dedication to God and all His people, they were asked to deliver a sermon
on the parable of The Good Samaritan. For those lacking the rigors of monastic
studies, it’s the story told by Jesus about a man who was set upon by robbers,
beaten and left on the side of the road. A priest walks by and offers no help. Neither does a Levite, another religious leader of the era. It’s a lone man from Samaria, hated by the local gentry, who goes out of his way to offer assistance - hence the title: Good Samaritan.
In the Princeton experiment, when the seminarians had their homily prepared, they were asked to
walk to another part of the campus and deliver their sermon to waiting
students. Half were told to hurry,
because they were running late. The
others were informed there was no rush, they had plenty of time.
As they journeyed across
campus, the experimenters arranged to have an actor slumped as a “victim”
strategically positioned along their route so that the seminarians were forced
to step over or around the man.
So, who stopped to help …
and who didn’t? They were all budding
“men of the cloth” on their way to deliver a sermon on just such a situation.
What the experiment revealed
was that those who were in a hurry passed the “victim” by. Those with time to spare, stopped and helped. It seems altruism and our commitment to our
fellow man is less connected to our religious beliefs and more closely aligned
with having some free time.
When the Divine shows up,
most of us are busy being too productive to even notice His presence. Maybe God doesn’t care whether we go to
church, temple or mosque. Maybe He’s
already out in the world waiting to meet us, but we keep passing Him by because
we’re in such a hurry.
Paying a Price
for Living our Lives
Since
leaving the monastery, I’d had two near-death experiences. The first was with “incurable” cancer. The second, a heart attack. Both were not-so-subtle reminders that my time’s
running short.
We’re not going to be around
forever, and we’re not able to have it all. Acknowledging this will generate more than
ample disappointment and regret. And
we’ll pay a price for it: Guilt.
But don’t be dismayed. Guilt doesn’t necessarily mean that we’ve
done something wrong. It’s more an
indication that we have said “no” to some larger authority: parent, teacher,
boss. Guilt’s an indication that we’ve
chosen to live our own lives and not someone else’s.
Stop trying to achieve balance
and start learning to enjoy chaos. Discovering and relishing one’s imperfect life sooner rather than later is
what’s available.
Oliver Wendell Holmes said
that most of us go to our graves with our music still inside. So, forget about work-life balance and let go
of the need to please everybody. Rather,
get out there and make some choices and let your music resonate.
The guilt won’t kill you and
you’ll do just fine if some folks don’t like you.
And you certainly don’t need
to have it all. For as Steven Wright
reminds us: even if you did, where would you put it?
P.S. If you’re thinking about writing me, give in
to the temptation. I love getting mail
... and being influenced by what you have to say. Please e-mail me at kennythemonk@yahoo.com.
Kenny,
Great messages...Profound inspiring thoughts...I love what you share and how you share...
May God continue to bless you, and may you continue to inspire others world-wide...
Blessings...Juanita Pittman-Brown
Posted by:Juanita Pittman-Brown | January 08, 2008 at 03:10 PM
"Stop trying to achieve balance and start learning to enjoy chaos. Discovering and relishing one’s imperfect life sooner rather than later is what’s available."
I like it!
Posted by:Wonderwebby | January 14, 2008 at 06:42 PM
Kenny, which Spanish proverb is that "Take what you want, says God, just pay for it"?
I've never ever heard it...
A spaniard.
Posted by:traslapersiana | January 15, 2008 at 10:54 AM
"Living with the Consequences" is a timely reminder for us parents in this increasingly busy world to stop being so paranoid, and to let our children do the things that children (should) do.
Posted by:Nani | March 03, 2008 at 07:40 PM