Dave Pollard's environmental philosophy, creative works, business papers and essays. In search of a better way to live and make a living, and a better understanding of how the world really works.
In
my book Finding
the Sweet Spot (info at
right), prospective entrepreneurs are encouraged to find the place
where your gifts (what you do uniquely well), your passions (what you
love doing), and your purpose (what is needed in the world that you
care about), all intersect.
From conversations with a lot of people, both entrepreneurs and
employees, I have found that most of the work people do seems to be in
areas 4, 5 and 6 in the chart above:
Disappointing work --
work you enjoy doing and which is clearly needed, but which you don't
do particularly well
Disengaged work --
work you do well and which is clearly needed, but which you don't
particularly enjoy
Self-sacrificing work
-- work which is clearly needed, but which you struggle to do well and
don't do particularly well
As I've applied this approach to coaching people to find the work
they're meant to do, I've observed that this sweet spot approach to
deciding how to spend our time can apply equally to the things people
do with their time away from the workplace -- hobbies, volunteer work,
and time spent with loved ones in family and community. And I've
observed that in these life pursuits, too, most of people's time seems
to be spent doing activities outside the area 3 sweet spot.
Specifically:
Hobbies -- these tend
to be things we enjoy but aren't appreciated (area 1 and 2), though a
surprising number of people seem to continue hobbies they've started
but no longer really enjoy (area 7 or 5, or outside all of the three
circles)
Volunteer work -- much
volunteer work seems to be taken on out of feelings of responsibility
or guilt, and it is frequently mismatched to skills, so it's most often
area 6 work (especially fundraising)
Family/community time
-- a distressing number of people I know acknowledge their
family/community obligations as "their second (or third) job"; the
initial love has faded or died, so it's most often area 5 and 6 "work"
So I know a guy who's really depressed. His job is area 5 work, his
hobby (fixing things) is in such demand that it too has become grueling
area 5 work, his "volunteer" work (related to senior care, including
his own relatives) is area 6 work, and his family obligations are a mix
of area 4 and 6 work. His life is all work and no fun, and even the
things he started out of love are now done out of obligation.
How did he get into this situation? Three reasons:
His passions changed.
He mistook things he
cared about for things he had a passion for (they're not the same thing
-- there are many causes I care about and believe in but shudder at the
thought of dedicating much of my time to working on).
He never learned to
say "no".
My guess is that he's in very good company. We are, after all, social
creatures. When people ask us for something, we are inclined to say
"yes", even if it's not something we're good at, or passionate about,
or care about. If someone asks us for something, they must really need
it, right? And if they're asking us, it's because they have a
legitimate expectation that we can and should fill that need, right? Or
else, why would they have asked us?
Maybe because they knew we'd say "yes"?
There are of course situations where we have no real choice but to say
"yes" to something that is in area 5 or 6, most notably when our
children or elder family members legitimately need us to take care of
them. But I think we're often victimized by people who are just needy
or dependent or helpless by nature (or out of ignorance), or who are
lazy (and I confess to being lazy myself), or who are manipulative.
Here are the key phrases to listen for (from bosses, lovers, family
members, friends, charitable organizations, customers, and others) when
the right answer, for you, is quite likely "no":
"I would have
expected/thought that you would have..."
"I expected more of
you."
"I confess I'm
disappointed that you failed to..."
"I really need you to
do this."
"I don't ask much of
you, but..."
"It wouldn't have hurt
you to..."
"We need your support
now to [insert needy cause here]"
"We only need..."
"If there was anyone
else I could have asked..."
"If you really loved
me you would..."
"All I'm asking is
that you..."
"It's
unfair/unreasonable of you not to..."
"I'll repay the
favour, I promise."
"I'm not asking
anything from you that I wouldn't ask of anyone who..."
"I know you won't
mind..."
"This is something
you're really good at..."
"We all need to do our
part..."
You get the idea. In each case you're put in a situation
where it's harder to say "no" than to say "yes".
Yet we know we're going to pay for that "yes". We can feel it even when
we're saying "yes" (it's more likely to come out "OK" or "I suppose..."
or "well if there's no real alternative" or some other phrase that
acknowledges, with an explicit or tacit sigh, that you've fallen for
the trap. Again.
What we don't factor into all these "yesses" is the cost, to our own
happiness, to the time (or in the case of charities, who allow us to
buy back that time with a donation of money, a ransom in lieu of time)
that might have been spent doing something that was in our area 3 sweet
spot, and even to the person who we have now accepted as a dependent,
and who may have in the process made us a co-dependent, feeding their
need.
Our society keeps us in check, by pounding us into obedience and low
self-esteem in our families (some families anyway), in school, in the
workplace, in social circles bent on making us everybody-else, and in
the struggle to find love (that is withheld and rationed to increase
its value). The lower your self-esteem, the harder it is to say "no".
But we owe it to ourselves to learn the three things that make it
easier for us to say "no":
What are true passions
are, even when they change. Every time we say "yes" to something we
have no passion for (or no longer have passion for), we short-change
ourselves, reducing the time available for things, just as important,
just as needed, that we do.
The difference between
our passions (what we love doing)
and things we care about. Illustration: One of my passions is writing.
One of the things I really care about is reducing suffering to
all-life-on-Earth. I said "no" to a request to do some volunteer work
at an animal shelter (mainly because I would probably throttle the
first person I met who had hurt an animal). Instead, I write
about animal cruelty, and the value of adopting shelter pets rather
than buying from breeders or pet shops.
How to say "no". This
is the hardest learning. When you get put in the situation where it's
easier to say "yes" than "no" but you get that twinge of knowing you
don't really want to do what is needed, the best thing to do is buy
time: don't say yes or no, no matter how insistant or adamant the
person asking you is. Telemarketers understand that the deferring of
the "purchasing" decision they want you to make is a huge threat to
their likelihood of success, and they pull out all the stops to try to
create urgency ("limited time offer" etc.). So defer. Then:
Tell yourself, until you have it down pat: You are not responsible
for others' expectations of you.
If they are needy, or helpless, or lazy, or manipulative, that's their
problem, not yours. If they're needy or helpless, what they probably
need most is a way to become less needy, not someone to cater to their
neediness. They need someone skilled (probably not you) in making them
less needy, someone who can teach them to do things themselves, to not
require so much attention and appreciation themselves, to be
physically, emotionally and intellectually more independent and
self-reliant.
If they're lazy or manipulative, you're doing everyone
a favour by not saying "yes", by not falling for what is essentially
abusive behaviour. If your boss says he's "disappointed" that you
haven't done something, he's playing with you. He's annoyed that you're
doing (or have done) what you think is right, instead of what he wants
you to do. Don't let the lazy and manipulative lay a guilt or fear trip
on you. Just say "no", unapologetically, and why you're saying no. If
he's going to fire you if you don't do something you don't believe is
right, or a priority, then force him to be honest about it, and then
decide whether your life and principles and happiness are worth giving
up for such a weasel boss, because he's just going to keep on doing it.
Cats and dogs have much to teach us about this. They understand that
every attempt to get a favour or concession from another is a power
negotiation. Your reaction is very reinforcing -- whether friendly,
resigned, politely resistant, or hostile. You keep saying "yes" when
you want to say "no", you're reinforcing that the neediness or
helplessness or laziness or manipulative behaviour works, and you'll
get a lot more of the same. But if you defer the decision, you're
showing that you won't be pushed, and if you say "no" and then if appropriate
explain why, unapologetically and undefensively, then eventually
they'll give up asking you. Examples of possible appropriate reasons
(and they're about you,
not the other person or the cause): "I don't contribute to causes
through telemarketers"; "I have too many other important things to do
to take this on" (and don't respond to a demand to list those other
important things); or even "This is not my responsibility."
It's not easy. No one wants a confrontation, a guilt trip, tears,
repercussions. Just remember: When you say "yes" when you want to say
"no", you are effectively saying "no" to something you do
have passion for, something that you will now not have time for. You
are reinforcing neediness and dependency and learned helplessness. And
you are not
responsible for others' expectations of you. And sometimes when it's
too hard to say "no", you may be able to say "I'll think about it." And
then really think about it.
Trust your instincts -- listen to that twinge that is telling you to
say "no". You owe it to yourself.
In your work, and in your personal life, there is stuff in the sweet
spot that you're meant
to do. Stuff you love to do, that you're great at doing, and that is really
needed in the world. Get to know yourself well enough to know what that
stuff is (and don't forget: it will change,
as you change). Don't settle for doing anything less.
One final thing: Maybe, unconsciously, unintentially, you put others in
the same awkward and annoying spot by asking them to do something, out
of neediness, helplessness, laziness or because it's easy to manipulate
them. If you do, please stop. Imagine how they feel, wanting
desperately to say "no" and feeling obliged to say "yes". Learn how not
to need, and how not to put others in this position, and then model
that behaviour.
MY GRAVITATIONAL COMMUNITY People
who have inspired or informed me frequently over the past few months.
For my full blogroll/online reference library, see
here. [* indicates
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