Making Peace with a Good Enough Job
Lisa Earle McLeod
Author of Selling with Noble Purpose | Keynote Speaker | HBR Contributor | Executive Advisor & Member of Marshall Goldsmith 100 Coaches
Is your current job your dream job? If you’re like most people….probably not.?Maybe there are parts of your job you don’t particularly enjoy, like granular reporting or clunky systems. Perhaps you actively dislike other elements, like an overbearing manager or inefficient coworkers.
When a job isn’t everything we want it to be, there’s a temptation to treat it like a stepping stone. Sometimes we view it as temporary. Or at worse, we hang our heads every day, feeling like we aren’t working up to our potential.
This morning, I heard about a new book coming out called The Good Enough Job: Reclaiming Life from Work.
I’ll confess, ‘good enough’ is the antithesis of my nature. That’s probably why I should read the book. This is the passage that first captured my attention:?
From the moment we ask children what they want to “be” when they grow up, we exalt the dream job as if it were life’s ultimate objective. Many entangle their identities with their jobs, with predictable damage to happiness, wellbeing, and even professional success.
I’ve had career ambitions my entire life. For me, the constant drumbeat of the “next step” is ever-present pounding, beating into my head, decade after decade. Sadly, I’ve let ‘perfection’ be the enemy of ‘great’ many times, and in doing so cost myself peace and happiness in the process. The author continues-
Rather than treat work as a calling or a dream, (author) Simone Stolzoff asks what it would take to reframe work as a part of life rather than the entirety of our lives. What does it mean for a job to be good enough?
I don’t know precisely how to accept a job as ‘good enough’- the book doesn’t come out for another month. But the opening text sure got me thinking about why we should reclaim life from work.
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Here are some reasons I’ve seen play out lately:
The sum of this shouldn’t be an invitation to keep your emotional cards close to your chest; you should still be all-in at work. But remember: A company will never love you back. My business partner Elizabeth just got back from maternity leave. She shared with me some advice she got upon her return – be where your feet are.
When you’re at work, be all in. And when you’re at home, be all in, too.
I get it; I’m Ms. Noble Purpose. I absolutely believe work should be a meaningful, challenging, and fun experience.
But it shouldn’t be everything.
Digital Transformation, CIO, Entrepreneur
1 年I totally agree, family and life comes first, work is source of income and in some cases opportunity to prove oneselve. One should not forget to invest in himself continuously and not only focus on working hard
Helping businesses in SE QLD boost efficiency, maximise productivity and secure their network. Lets remove time leaks and improve your systems ??
1 年"Makit it just part of life, but not your life." - Great!
Purpose-Driven Leader, Connector, Professional Cat Herder
1 年Great read Lisa Earle McLeod. Loved the advice from Elizabeth Lotardo - 'be where your feet are' ??
Gerente de Negócios Oil & Gas @ CESAR | Inova??o, Gest?o de Sistemas Complexos
1 年and... A company will never love you back. Lisa Earle McLeod, thank you for reminding me! we always need to remember that.
Diverse Student Success Leader, Career Advisor, Adult Learner Advocate, College Partner Liaison, People & Process Improvement Manager, Adjunct Faculty, Health Care Liaison, Board Member, Community Association Liaison
1 年“Your “dream job” might not exist in 10 years. And if you spend the next 9 years chasing it, that’s going to be a devastating realization. Focusing on the present enables you to be excited about the future, instead of fearing the metaphorical ticking clock.” Lisa Earle McLeod This resonates with me. We focus so much on the future we sometimes miss the present.