Office Capers: Everything Is Personal
The working world today is different from what it was when our parents joined it. On the one hand, it is more demanding. The hours are longer, the competition fiercer, and the effort involved greater. On the other hand, it is more flexible. Structures are more fluid, roles less defined, and protocols less formal. It’s getting hard to draw the line between professional and personal.
I started working a while ago. I’ve held onto the notion of keeping my personal and professional life separate. Hence I have never dated anybody I worked with. I also never anticipated or even tried making friends. It isn’t that simple anymore. It’s not easy to compartmentalise emotions and energy now. It isn’t even easy to slot people into areas of professional and personal contact anymore.
This has been complicated several times over since my MBA program. Through the years of preparing for the program and then actually going through it, I have become a part of a network now. At that time it just seemed like I was competing with this many people for a seat. A little later it was about classmates and getting together with them on some class projects. Classmates are after all classmates – buddies in some sense.
The realisation is hitting me right now that these are not people who are going to vanish or even stay put within my ‘personal life’ sphere. All of these people have entered the working world around the same time that I did and will continue to be there in some way. They’ve become colleagues, clients, competitors, vendors. This is a network of people. People I’ve known because I grew up with them, competed with them, studied with them and worked with them. It is a sudden feeling of belonging…of being a part of a huge network. I am one link in a huge mechanism…inextricably connected to a hundred others.
I have met people who I like, in the course of my work and it doesn’t seem to make sense to restrict my contact with them simply because I have worked with them. When you work together with people, face pressures together and even cover up for each other, there is a certain bond that develops. I have good memories of my first workplace not just because the work was interesting but also because the people there contributed significantly to my growth as a person.
I’m not even sure where the professional life ends and where the personal starts. There aren’t any clear-cut rules over who to maintain a facade with and who to relax with, any more. More and more I think that just like our parents’ generation stood for rebellion against the system, ours represents the birth of new systems. Gender stereotypes, nepotism, work structures….all dissolve. Maybe it is a good thing to be in a time where a person’s role is not defined by the structure. Rather the structures are defined by the people who constitute them.
Your work is more than the reason for your salary slip. There is also satisfaction, frustration, pressure, and victory. It is validation. As of today, my worth as an individual is so much determined by my work and how I do it, how my colleagues see me and where I fit into the working world. As the Godfather would say “Everything is personal.”
You spoke my mind (and maybe many other minds) in this post. Having worked in a 10 person company and a 45,000 person company, all that you said here has always been so pertinent.–>
You spoke my mind (and maybe many other minds) in this post. Having worked in a 10 person company and a 45,000 person company, all that you said here has always been so pertinent.
It’s a big house and is shared by 3 of us. One is a Fleet Manager, one is a Chief Operations Officer and one is a Management consultant! And we all work for the same organization! Picture that! 🙂
Absolutely!
Couldn’t agree more on this topic.
I still have fond memories of my previous organisation and the people whoworked with me are still my buddies…
Bosses are not just superiors in today’s corporate world. It’s also the most crucial link you have with the organisation top mannagement.
A bad boss can make you dread coming to office.
If u happen to be out of home for 16 hrs a day, where is the scope for personal life at all?