Can you be yourself at work?
Photo: Susan Schmitz via Shutterstock

Can you be yourself at work?

True confession – I have never been a great employee.

I have never fit well into organizational structures, have never quietly accepted rules and politics, never accepted the “grey area” between fair and unfair, and never understood why I couldn’t just “be myself.”

Growing up with parents who were small business people I didn’t have dinner table conversations about “the boss” – my parents were the bosses, running their ventures the way they felt was right and hiring people they liked and wanted to spend their days with. And both parents ran businesses that aligned with what they personally loved (my mother had a gift shop that sold handcrafts and was an outlet for her own passion for sewing, and my father owned a bike shop and sporting goods store that was heavy on hockey equipment, like the good Canadian boy he was).

I saw them delight in their employees’ successes and celebrate their wins, both personal and professional, and I saw them sadly but determinedly have difficult candid conversations when things weren’t going well.

And I saw their employees grow and thrive. From the teenager at their first part-time job to the formerly incarcerated who was given an opportunity to start a new path to the parent who was sole provider for a family I saw loyalty and diversity and trust and appreciation for curiosity and challenging the status quo and the matching of potential with opportunity.

I was the first in my family to have a “corporate” job – and it never felt like it fit. None of my corporate jobs did, although I was lucky enough to spend time in a couple of organizations that I truly loved. But there always seemed to be a personal cost – a barrier to authenticity, a set of rules I didn’t understand or agree with, a lack of appreciation and respect tied to title and role. Whether it be what you could discuss with a co-worker or what you wore to work or what direction you wanted to take your career, there always seemed to be a disconnect between what I – and many of my colleagues – really felt and wanted and believed – and what the organization required in order to offer rewards and recognition.

As an executive coach I’ve had thousands of conversations with people who have been trying to reconcile what they want from their life with what is expected of them at work and, to varying degrees, more often than not there has been a gap. For many of my clients there has also been a recognition that they were in a position, as a senior leader, to create change, and in many cases they’ve been able to do that. But the struggle is real. Most organizations put invisible limits on the degree to which their people feel they can be “themselves” at work.

To be clear, I don’t think that “being yourself” at work means you have a license to treat others badly, or say everything that’s on your mind at every moment. Not at all. But I constantly see people fearful of showing who they truly are when inside their organizational system. And I see leaders focused on fitting into the system rather than asking whether it could benefit from some expansion or change. And it makes me sad.

I’m also clear that change is a shared responsibility. As offered by Don Miguel Ruiz in The Four Agreements – we have to take full responsibility for our half of every relationship. Our half. Not more, not less. And make no mistake – working in an organization means you have a relationship with that entity. Which means you have a personal responsibility to set and communicate your boundaries, ask for what you need and pay attention to the impact your behaviours and choices have on others. And, in my view, the organization has a responsibility to listen to you, to communicate its expectations, and to create an environment where humans can truly thrive in order to support its ultimate success.

I am optimistic when I see organizations embracing tools like the?Sparketypes?– it tells me that there is some increasing interest in not only helping people see themselves more clearly but in having what might feel like difficult or at least courageous conversations about how best to ensure more people are working in alignment with what really lights them up. Small steps…but there is so much work to do. And after what we’ve all experienced this past two years, more and more people are doing deep personal reflection and making more choices based on what they need in order to live and thrive authentically. So I sincerely hope that organizations aren’t ignoring this movement. It’s not going away.

So here’s my question, and the challenge I will be focusing on going forward – how can we close the gap between what it feels like to work in an organization and what it feels like to live, work and thrive authentically? I welcome your ideas – and more to follow!

Mike Nixon

Writer | Memoirist | USMC 1968-1972 | Attorney | Inveterate Reader | Armchair Historian

3 年

By the way, I accidentally unsubscribed. I think I'm subscribed again. Thanks.

Mike Nixon

Writer | Memoirist | USMC 1968-1972 | Attorney | Inveterate Reader | Armchair Historian

3 年

Thanks, Karen. I enjoyed this last week. Good to get a chance to read it again. Thanks.

回复
Sarah Neville (she/her)

Changing the Conversation to Build Cultures of Connection, Inclusion and Allyship - Director, Keynote Speaker at Open Line Communications

3 年

I love this post, Karen, and the authenticity with which you write. It feels very you, and that, of course, is the point! Because I work in Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, the idea of being able to "bring your whole self to work" is one that is often given lip service, but the unwritten rules you reference make it impossible. Leaders have to create the conditions for psychological safety - for employees to be able to share honestly and authentically. And making the "rules" more explicit would help. For so many of us, we don't even know what they are until theres's a transgression!

Asya Spears

Statistician | Data Literacy & Enablement

3 年

Thanks for sharing about Sparktypes! I hadn’t heard of it before and am excited to consider how I can use my type to shape how I plan my business activities.

Andrew Weston, MBA

Technology & Operations Executive | Strategy Enablement | Transformation Leader | Relationship Management | Execution

3 年

I completely agree with the spirit of your point about authenticity, but also suggest we reframe our thinking about what it means to participate in an organization. I prefer to view working at a company as participating in a community. All communities have structures and norms that, at least to some degree, need to be adhered to. Most of the time, we actively choose to follow those norms by choosing to be a member of that community. The larger the community, the more likely you will need to follow exisitng norms/structures (vs shaping them yourself). Framing things this way is more empowering and more personally responsible, IMHO.

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