On Resilience and Entitlement - My Grandmother’s life in perspective
A few months ago someone on a team briefing said that the food in our canteen was ‘like prison food’. I was not present but what immediately jumped to mind was ‘How do you know?’ and should we maybe check your pre-employment history?
On a more serious note, I doubt the canteen food deserves that label. Our colleagues pay £3 for a full meal, either Western or Korean (with Samsung picking up the balance to full cost), with various combinations as options including a full salad bar as an alternative. It is not perfect and we can certainly improve it but it is hardly 'prison food'. So my second thought was - If you don’t like it, find your own lunch solution.
What this episode points to is just one tiny example of an incredible sense of entitlement I have seen in recent years amongst our colleagues. I am not overly hopeful for the next 5-15 years in world affairs and whilst I’m no oracle I am concerned about the possibility of further destabilisation in the world (translate that as you wish). When I think of this I start to wonder how western society will adapt to the worst possible outcomes. We appear to be weak, entitled and insufficiently resilient.
As I was contemplating this, I realised I had a case study in my family about resilience - my beloved grandmother’s life story. She passed away in 2016 at the age of 92 and she has been the most loving and caring person I have ever known. Always positive and never complaining despite what she has lived through. Let me re-cap key moments from her life, hopefully in a way that helps with imagining it:
It is easy to criticise someone else like I did with the entitled colleague I mention at the beginning. In truth, I am not sure I could sanely survive what my grandmother went through. I suspect our expectation since WWII has been one of increased prosperity and that every generation will live a better life and some of these terrible events of the past will fade. I also suppose with the period of peace and prosperity, especially in Western Europe and other developed countries, we - including me - take more and more things for granted and eventually we get more and more 'entitled'.
My grandmother must have felt devastated on many occasions in her younger life - yet it must also have led her to become incredible resilient, resourceful and eventually reassured (when I knew her, she definitely did not take any s*** from anyone).
I may be entirely wrong in my forecast of things to come in the world (and I honestly hope that I am) - but if I'm not, how will we and especially the younger generations deal of today deal with the storm? How will they develop resilience? How do we prepare them for 'real life' rather than try to prepare 'life for them'?
Perhaps a dose of 'reality', a pinch of 'tough love', feedback that is 'straight between the eyes' might be needed - not for anyone to re-live the desperations my grandmother went through - but to build back some of the resilience that we might have lost.
Then again, I may be all wrong.
Business Development Consultant
10 个月What an inspiring story, Thank you for sharing!
Executive Coach | Leadership Coach | Career Coach | Non Executive Director | Facilitator | Keynote Speaker | Author | Well-being | Resilience | Mental Toughness |
10 个月Great story Tamas thank you for sharing! I agree that many people today despite a great education and incredible life chances, struggle to flourish and make the best of the opportunities in this VUCA world. Most of us cannot even imagine what your grandmother would have experienced. She sounds like she had many qualities associated with wellbeing and resilience - gratitude, perspective taking, kindness, loving relationships, learning & personal growth, self-acceptance, integrity, purpose - all of which can help us navigate through inevitable tough times and adversity. I strongly believe that a better understanding of what it means to be well and live well, in spite of context, and how we can invest in building these resources, is much needed.
Senior HR Professional
10 个月Thank you for sharing this story, Tamas, it resonated with me deeply, especially in the context of current war in my country. It is very important to appreciate how blessed we are and to develop resilience to deal with life storms.
How do we prepare them for 'real life' rather than try to prepare 'life for them'? 100% Tamas, I think this is the trap we parents fall into.
Well said Tamas !!!