Friday, July 13, 2012

Work is integral to human wellbeing . . . . but!


Work, in all its broad and complex manifestations, is integral to human wellbeing.

Influential economist,
 Jeffrey Sachs
The idea of work is, however, in dispute.

Work never really arose, it was simply a necessity that was important to human survival; it was beyond anything else an obligation each faced if they were to flourish.

It is somewhat risky to consider the idea of work as being in dispute for it is, certainly in the developed world, universal and an unreservedly linked to the modern idea of the good life.

That “dispute” is really only in my mind, but my views are aligned with an implacable ally, one I would prefer it didn’t have, but the harder we work for the wrong goals, the more we disrupt the world’s ecological balance.

Nature, our benevolent dictator, always seeks equilibrium, but mankind working diligently, particularly for the past two centuries, has created an amazingly complex society and so disrupted earth’s balance.

Embroiled in the complexity we have created, the simple life is remote; so remote that any bid to achieve it will be thwarted by the complications we have created.

However, that does not mean we should not aspire to the simple life; a life in which work is not about acquisition and consumption, rather ensuring that we can access life’s needs and within that allow us more free time for purposeful leisure.

Wellbeing, countless surveys has shown, is not linked to the modern way of acquisition or consumption, but it is to be found in a mindfulness of living and a considered life.

Writing in his latest book, Jeffrey Sachs, who has been described by the New York Times, as "probably the most important economist in the world," said: “The relentless drumbeat of consumerism into our lives has led to extreme short-sightedness, consumer addictions and the shrivelling of compassion”.


Sachs' latest book.
Sachs continues: “The logic of profit maximization, combined with unprecedented breakthroughs in information and communications technology, has led to an economy of distraction the likes of which the world have never before seen. The end result is a society of consumer addictions, personal anxieties, growing loneliness in the midst of electronic social networks, and financial networks, and financial distress. This is true for super-rich as well as the rest of society”.

Considering that, each of us should contemplate what Aristotle had to had to say today’s hyper-consumerism ever existed – “I count him braver who overcomes his desires that him who conquers his enemies; for the hardest victory is over self.”

Much of modern work does little but help us fulfil those desires Aristotle discusses, so it takes a brave and thoughtful soul to escape the all-encompassing shopping mandate the corporatocracy has convinced us is the portal to the good life.

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

An idea to help us escape 'the busy trap'


“I’m so busy” is the plea of most workers.

That “plea”, writer Tim Kreider says in the New York Time arises when people find they have fallen into what he calls “the busy trap”.

Tim Kreider's book,
 'We Learn Nothing'.
Kreider says that those in that “trap” is “almost always people whose lamented busyness is purely self-imposed: work and obligations they’ve taken on voluntarily, classes and activities they’ve “encouraged” their kids to participate in. They’re busy because of their own ambition or drive or anxiety, because they’re addicted to busyness and dread what they might have to face in its absence”.

Writing in the “Opinionator” in a story headed: “The ‘busy’ trap”, Kreider said that almost everyone he knows is busy.

The idea of busy is just that, an idea, and if people imagine they are busy then they are busy – it illustrates the power of ideas.

Working eight hours a day, and frequently longer, is simply an idea an idea that has perverted the human psyche and the four-hour day is just that, an idea; an idea with the power to erode the idea of ‘busy’.

Tim Kreider is the author of “We Learn Nothing.”