The Paradox of Work
In today's Sunday Letters article, I'm taking a look at the paradox of work. We need it but we seem to resent it. Given the choice, if the need for money was not the prime mover, we might not even do what we do. We can't wait to get away from it. We look forward to Fridays and dread Monday mornings. There is the belief in us that somewhere in the future it will get better, we'll have more money, life will be easier. Meanwhile, we wish our lives away and spend our so-called spare time engaged in frivolous activities that offer no complexity or lasting satisfaction. We are lost in the paradox of work, but perhaps there is an answer…We've got a bit of a difficult relationship with work, don't we? We need it to provide us with income, to pay bills, to buy stuff – much of which we don't need, take holidays and pretty much everything connected with the modern way of life. Of course, work has many positive social aspects. We find friends there, build relationships, personal knowledge and expertise through its daily execution. But many of us dread work. We go to our workplace not because we love it, but because it provides us with income. We're compelled to go. In that respect, it has become a means to an end and as such it has developed many negative connotations. It seems that we have become caught in the paradox of work. I wonder if money was no concern would we still choose to do what we do for the majority of our waking hours.
Thanks,getting people to question the system fantastic.It does not work and never has.I read the e-book Artist Manifesto Great in fact it is brilliant.Thanks for the Artist’s Manifesto.Listen to the song by the Animals ” got to get out of this place”1965 more than 50 years ago lyrics just what you talking about.
Graham
We gotta get out of this place
If it’s the last thing we ever do
We gotta get out of this place
Girl, there’s a better life for me and you
Somewhere baby, somehow I know it
Thanks for reading Graham. You know, we’ll eventually figure it out. Working environments may be pretty and comfortable for many of us, but it’s just a veneer designed to keep people pseudo-happy. The mining towns in the US did the same thing in 1800’s, they made it so people wouldn’t leave.