There is nobody as good as a person who keeps time.
That person is a man of his word, he is dependable and every employer’s
dream come true. It is a pleasure doing business with such a person and
the list goes on. But over here, there is the scent of a problem.
Sometimes
the preoccupation with time can make a person a workaholic. Now, this
is no joke in fact it is a phenomenon that is very much on the rise
especially among executives. Are you a workaholic? Well, why don’t
you find out? There are a series of questions given below, if you have
the time, why don’t you go through them and find out if you are a
workaholic or not.
All you have to do is answer yes or no to the following
questions.
- Do you find yourself constantly preoccupied with your work?
- Do your
family and friends complain that they hardly get to see you?
- Do you
take your work with you when you go home?
- Do you find it increasingly
difficult to get time to relax and have fun?
- Do you find it difficult
to have food at the correct times?
So what
are your answers like? If your answer to all the questions was ‘yes’,
then you might as well join the club of “Alcoholics Anonymous”.
If three of your answers were affirmative, then you might send in your membership
request. If you gave only two yes answers still you are not safe, none of your
answers should be yes!
But I have bad news for you. Becoming a workaholic is
not all that good. I suppose you have heard the proverb, “all work
and no play makes Jack a dull boy.” Man
is not a one-dimensional piece of glass. He has a lot of facets and sides,
interests and drives which must all be developed. He is more like a diamond
that must shine
and sparkle when viewed from different angles.
It’s almost as if money
becomes the only thing that motivates a person. Now, I want to make one
point very clear. Workaholism is very different from
meeting deadlines. We all get deadlines and times when work just piles
up in the office. But that should be a passing phase, probably like when
an
audit or
an inspection is taking place; then of course all the people are just flying
around.
That is not workaholism. In such a situation everyone just joins
the team and works as hard as possible to get things done in the best
possible way
within
the limited time. Though every one may groan and swear, it is something
that gets over within a few days or in a week at the most. That is not
an unhealthy
thing. In fact the, very though t that there are lot of people working
along with us is something that gets the drudgery out of the job.
Workaholism
on the other hand is very different thing. It means that you are going
to miss out on a lot of the good things in life. And before you
even
know what happened to you, you will end up like one of those steel collar
workers, or in other words a living robot.
Work is important in life. We
need to work to earn our daily bread. But work is not the only important
thing in life. Being a person who is very
time
conscious does not mean that you have to end up being obsessed with your
work. In fact
if you are time conscious and are really concerned about getting things
done on time, then there are very little chances that you will end up
as a workaholic.
Getting things done on time means working well within
the office hours. And that in turn means having enough free time to enjoy
your leisure
hours. Every
body
need time to unwind. And unwinding must certainly be there. Or else you
will end up totally worked up.
Contrary to popular belief workaholism
is in reality counter productive. That’s
because when it lasts it might seem good enough, but nothing in this
world lasts for ever. Sooner or later you will experience what experts
now refer to as the
Executive Burnout. I will deal more with the executive burnout in the
next chapter.
Before I conclude this chapter, I just want to raise a point
for you to ponder on.
Imagine that you have been working a little more
than harder the whole day. You have been on your toes doing this and
doing that. Towards the
end of
the day
you realize, or you just come to know that there is some urgent work
to be done that must be dispatched the following day.
You have two alternatives
before you, you can tell the security that you will be working a few
extra hours while the others pick up their
bags and
leave.
The very thought that you have to stay back when the others are leaving
is going
to weigh down on you, though you might feel kid of grand when you look
at others with the air of a person who has to do his duty.
Then you have
to telephone your spouse or friends and tell them that you will be late
and may probably have to call off the date that you
had fixed
for the
night. That itself is going to make you grumpy especially if you hear
an unenthusiastic grunt from the other side of the line.
After that with
a private sigh of resignation you have to sit down to finish that @#%^& piece
of work. (I’m sure you will think of unprintable words
to describe the work at this juncture). You have to remember that you
are already exhausted with the busy day that you had. It goes without
saying that if at all
you finish the task, the work will be far from satisfactory.
Your other
alternative is that you take a quick look at the work and estimate how
long is will take for you to finish it. Then you forget
completely
about it and pack you things and clear up your workstation and leave
with all the
others, bidding a cheerful goodnight to every tom Dick and Harry, and
every Jane Susan
and Mary. You reach home in the best of spirits and have a nice time
with the kids or enjoy yourself with your date. You go to sleep early
and wake
up thoroughly
refreshed in the morning. You work out for sometime, have a shower and
a good breakfast and try to reach your office a little earlier than usual
with
a song
in your heart and a spring to your step.
Now if you sit down to do the
work, not only will the quality of the work be much better but in all
likelihood you will take les time than
is really
required
for it. Well, what do you think, isn’t it worth trying out? |