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Saying No to Passion in the Workplace

by Rick Baker
On Apr 18, 2012

After reading several 100-year-old self-development classics1, I have concluded there is no room for Passion in the workplace.

I realize that may come across as a contradiction: I have written several articles about Passion in the workplace2.

In presentations, workshops, and one-on-one sessions, I have explained my thinking.

Spirited Leaders uses a Minus10-to-Plus10 Scale to measure feelings.

When we are not feeling good about work we score somewhere between Minus10 and Zero...Minus10 being this is absolutely the worst I have ever felt in my life and Zero being neutral [not bad, not good, just ambivalence]. 

When we are feeling good about work we score between Zero and Plus10. In the past, I have said:

  • a score from Plus1 to Plus4 means we Accept our work. At Plus1 we Tolerate work...don't have much good things to say about it...but, it is bearable and better than doing nothing. As we approach a score of Plus4 we experience increased positive feelings about work. 
  • a score of Plus4 to Plus7 means we Enjoy our work. We consider our work-time as time well spent and we feel our work-activities are productive.
  • a score of Plus7 to Plus10 means we are Enthusiastic about our work. In this range, our work is an important part of our lives. As we approach Plus10 we feel our work is aligned with our life purpose. And - a score of Plus10 means Passion...as in Passion for Work Excellence.
Now, I say all of that except I will not use the word 'Passion' to describe Plus10. Instead, I will say a score of Plus10 means work is 'Completely Aligned with Life Purpose' or, using a more modern phrase, work is 'In The Zone'. 
 
I will not use the word 'Passion' because I now believe Passion is the wrong word. Passion is an inflamed emotional state. It does not fit with work. In fact, it is damaging at work. If we see Passion at work then it will likely be a symptom of unbridled, excessive, optimism or mania...both of which are damaging indeed!
 
I will use descriptions like 'Completely Aligned with Life Purpose' and 'In The Zone' because they accurately describe how the best feelings of work happen and how we can recognize those feelings.
 
 
NOTE: During our workdays, none of us can expect to sustain a score of Plus10. However, almost all of us can feel Plus10 from time to time and feel at least Plus7 most of the time.
 

 

Footnotes:

  1. Particularly, the works of Robert Collier and the works of James Allen.
  2. Articles about Passion in the workplace: one, two three, four, five

Tags:

Emotions & Feelings @ Work | Measure & Monitor

Thought Tweet #457

by Rick Baker
On Apr 17, 2012

Thought Tweet #457 Unfinished business tends to linger in the mind...distracting it.

 

The Thinking Behind The Tweet

When we agree to do things and then postpone doing those things they tend to sit in memory and pop up from time to time. That distracts focus, taking the mind away from the task at hand. It's like accidental multi-tasking. 'Loose ends' consume time, brain-space, and thought-energy.

Tags:

Brain: about the Human Brain | Thought Tweets

Nurture + Demand = Progress

by Rick Baker
On Apr 17, 2012

"Moderation is the silken string running through the pearl-chain of all virtues.1"

Recently, I have spent considerable time thinking about moderation...thinking how often people violate the common sense called moderation, which we all know from firsthand experience and from watching others struggle without it.

So, when I read '21st Century Leadership'2, the heading "Become More Nurturing and More Demanding" captured my attention. That, according to the author, Dave Lefkowith, is the 2nd step to becoming a 21st Century Leader.

Many entrepreneurs and business leaders do need to step back and take a good look at how they go about:

  • Placing demands on their followers
  • Handling interpersonal activity with their followers
Spirited Leaders recommends moderation.
 
Like Lefkowith, we see a need for Leaders to be either more nurturing. When we think of nurturing we think of Transactional Analysis, 60-year-old behavioural psychology, which, in summary, states people behave like:
  • Parents,
  • Adults, &
  • Children
According to Transactional Analysis, most of us behave all three ways. We adjust our behaviour in reaction to other people and in reaction to differing situations. This is a big part of Spirited Leaders' philosophy - Business Only Contains 3 Things: People, Process, & Situations
 
When doing Parent behaviour we can be demanding or we can be nurturing. When in the Adult behaviour mode we are more logical and less emotional. And, in the Child mode we can act anywhere between most-accommodating to most-belligerent. 
 
This Parent-Adult-Child behaviour model makes it easy to explain exactly how business leaders, especially hands-on entrepreneurs, can go about Becoming More Nurturing and More Demanding. Actually, Spirited Leaders recommends: Becoming More Nurturing and Making Better Demands.

How to become More Nurturing: that's simple, just think of the best behaviour either of your parents [or parental figures] presented to you. That's your best example of a Nurturing Parent...ie, how to behave like a Transactional Behaving Nurturing Parent. Clearly, in the business environment, there are limitations to the amount of nurturing. Too much is a turn off: your followers are not Children. Too little is uncaring: at least, that's the way some or perhaps many of your followers will feel. 

How to make Better Demands: defining this is more challenging. Here's a question that might help. When you became an Adult, did either of your Parents ever, from time to time, still treat you like a Child? I mean, after you became an Adult, did either of your Parents continue to give you advice about money?, how to raise children?, how much to drink?, how fast to drive?...etc? If this never happened to you...then you are one of the lucky few. If this did happen to you - how did you feel? Being an adult - getting advice from your Parent - how di that feel? Remember that feeling when you place a demand on one of your followers. That's the safe way to be.

Summing up:

Make sure you maintain some desire to be Nurturing. That will be of most value when your followers are struggling at work tasks and are bringing the results of tough [after-hours] personal situations to your workplace.

Aim for more open, Adult-to-Adult behaviour; set boundaries on your emotions before and during interactions with your followers. As trust builds, present more Adult-to-Adult demands on your followers.

And, allow a bit of the Child within you to generate and enjoy workplace humour.

 

PS: Dave Lefkowith's Ten Steps to Becoming a 21st Century Leader: 

  1. Broaden Your Style
  2. Become More Nurturing and More Demanding
  3. Become Less Predictable
  4. Focus Like a Maniac on Opportunity
  5. Create "Opportunity Laboratories" for Top Prospects
  6. Celebrate (the Right Type of) Failure
  7. Anticipate and Address Emerging Issues
  8. Create an Explicit Stakeholder Management Strategy
  9. Touch Individuals Deep within Your Organization
  10. Create Brutally Direct Self-Development Mechanisms


Footnote:

  1. Thomas Fuller, 'The Holy State and the Profane State', (1642)
  2. Dave Lefkowith, '21st Century Leadership', (2001)

Tags:

Emotions & Feelings @ Work | Entrepreneur Thinking | Leaders' Thoughts | Personalities @ Work

Thought Tweet #456

by Rick Baker
On Apr 16, 2012

Thought Tweet #456 Intrinsic Goals feel right...they inspire & they energize.

 

The Thinking Behind The Tweet

Intrinsic Goals envision life purpose, mastery of task, and self-actualization. Naturally, intrinsic goals align with talents and Strengths. And, in contrast to extrinsic goals, intrinsic goals tend to broaden rather than restrict experiences. 

Titanic Courage

by Rick Baker
On Apr 13, 2012

"John Jacob Astor had practical talent in a remarkable degree. During a storm at sea, on his voyage to America, the other passengers ran about the deck in despair, expecting every minute to go down; but young Astor went below and coolly put on his best suit of clothes, saying that if the ship should founder and he should happen to be rescued, he would at least save his best suit of clothes."

That's an excerpt from Orison Swett Marden's classic 'Pushing to the Front' [page 263 of my copy]. 

When I read that paragraph, it sent a shiver down my spine.

I immediately set down the book and went to Wikipedia...to look up John Jacob Astor. My memory was accurate, John Jacob Astor perished with the sinking of the Titanic, during its maiden voyage to America.

I remembered that because John Jacob Astor was one of the world's richest men during the late-19th and early-20th Centuries. 

The Titanic sank on April 15th, 1912...this weekend marks the 100th anniversary of that enormous tragedy.  

The reason for the shiver down my spine...the book was published before the sinking of the Titanic.

'Pushing to the Front' was written in the mid-1890's and published later. Apparently the original manuscript was lost in a fire and the author had to spend another year re-writing it. Then, after being shelved for a period of time, it was published. My copy was printed in 1911, the year before the sinking of the Titanic. [see 'Pushing to the Front']

 

Synchronicity, serendipity, and such things always catch my attention.

 

PS: It is possible Orison Swett Marden was referring to one of John Jacob Astor's namesakes ...after all, he was John Jacob Astor IV. Either way, it is rather chilling to read those words, created by Orison Swett Marden in an effort to motivate and inspire young people during the difficult economic times of the later 1890's...knowing that John Jacob Astor IV perished at sea shortly after the book was published, during Orison Swett Marden's lifetime.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tags:

Beyond Business

Thought Tweet #455

by Rick Baker
On Apr 13, 2012

Thought Tweet #455 We need to take a single, small side-step to get out of a Bad-Habit rut.

 

The Thinking Behind The Tweet

Habits exist in loops of brain circuitry. [Or, at least, that's a description that allows us to understand and address Habits.] With each repetition, a Habit becomes more ingrained...the Habit groove or rut becomes deeper and deeper. While it may seem this applies more to Bad Habits than to Good Habits, we must not underestimate the force of the good. We must understand the grooves and ruts of several Habits are 'overlapped' and 'intertwined'. Good Habits support one another in positive grooves. Bad Habits support one another in negative ruts. To escape a Bad-Habit rut we must focus our attention and interest on making a single, small side-step. That's the way to get out of a Bad Habit rut.

Tags:

Habits: Good Habits, Bad Habits, & New Things | Thought Tweets

Copyright © 2012. W.F.C (Rick) Baker. All Rights Reserved.