Work Ethics
February 5, 2014
I love to go to conferences or workshops where there are
motivational speakers. I always come away feeling so fired up and ready to take
on the world. Unfortunately, it lasts until I get back to work and the normal
day to day grind starts bogging me down then I lose that fire and enthusiasm. I
went to one of those conferences a couple of weeks ago and heard an awesome
speaker. With the next few posts, I’m going to try to hold on to a little bit
of that enthusiasm and hopefully in the process, keep me on fire and encouraged
to keep taking on the world. I’m going to use a few of the points that the
speaker made during his awesome presentation as my talking points and maybe,
just maybe it’ll encourage some of you all too.
Work Ethics by definition is said to be “a belief in
the moral benefit and importance of work and its inherent ability to strengthen
character. This is according to the definition that I found on dictionary.com.
What has happened to our work ethics over the last several
years? According to some statistics that the speaker gave to us, 22% of
American workers love their jobs so much that they figuratively run to work.
The rest of us, well, I guess we’re the ones that drag in and complain the
whole day. I tend to fall somewhere in the middle of these two classes though.
There are days that I run to work. I can’t wait to get there and get the day
started and start working with the students. Then there are the days that all I
want to do is pull the covers back up over my head and tell the world “Take
this job and shove it!”
I was raised by hard working parents and grandparents. My
dad was/is a hard worker, always seeing that his family was provided for. My
mom, while she didn’t work that much outside of the home, she raised my brother
and I and many other kids that she baby sat for. She was always there when we
went to school of the morning and waiting on us when we got off the bus in the
afternoon. How she managed to keep the bills paid and food on our table on
their sometimes very limited budget, I will never know. Now we didn’t have the
finest of “things” that were out there, but we never went without and we always
had our needs met. And, I can 100% say
that we had the finest of family and love that there ever was – and still do
thankfully. We were raised to work hard at whatever job we had. We were taught
that you earned things - houses, cars, toys, tv’s, this kind of thing - by that
hard work. We were also taught to take care of our own. Now mind you, if my
brother or I either one went to our parents for financial help, I know that
they would do the best that they could to help us out. But after the way that
we were raised, I don’t think I could ever bring myself to go ask them for it.
It’s not out of fear that I wouldn’t ask them, it’s totally out of respect for
the way that they raised us and the examples that they set for us.
Over the last 20 plus years that I’ve been in the “real
world” I’ve seen many different views as to what work ethics means to others.
I’ve had some employees work for me that had a good job as far as the “package”
went – good insurance, reasonable pay and benefits, decent hours – but that
person would rather not work and collect welfare for them and their kids than
to do the job. What is wrong with that mentality? I’ve seen people that come to
work and bust their butts to do the best job that they possibly can each and
every day. I’ve seen people that will do just enough to get by or meet
production and that’s all you’re ever going to get from them. I’ve seen ones
that come in each and every day and fuss and complain and gripe about their
job, even going so far as to voice “I hate this place”- those are the ones that
I refer to as the life-suckers because they totally suck the life out of
everyone around them.
I’m assuming that these kids of mentalities about their own
work ethics have been around since the dawn of time. Although I think in recent
years the life-suckers, the just getting by’ers, and the stay home and collect
welfare ones seems to be gaining in numbers on those that work hard for what
they’ve got. What kind of message are we sending to our young people with these
beliefs? Do we really think that this country was built on the backs of those
that just did enough to get by? Back during the World War II era when the women
worked in many of the American factories while the men were fighting a war on
two fronts, do you think they would have been as successful as they were if
they’d had that just getting by or staying at home collecting welfare attitude?
I know not all of us are blessed by having our dream job. I
still don’t know what I want to be when I grow up so I don’t know what my dream
job would be. I mean sure, if I could figure out a way to stay home all the
time and still get the pay check, yeah, I’d do it. But seriously, why can’t we
all try to find something positive about the job that we have? Sure, there are
times that I complain about things, people, rules, etc. with my work, but there
are still silver linings around all of the clouds. There are still
opportunities with each and every day – sometimes more than others and
sometimes hard to remember. I also remind myself that I like to eat, I like to
drive my car, I like to live in my house, I like to have that house cool in the
summertime and warm in the winter, I like to have times that me and my husband
can go out to eat or go to a movie, and I like to be able to feed all of my
critters; I cannot do any of these things if I’m not working. That helps to
remind me to be thankful for what I’ve got.
In addition to being thankful and trying to make the most of
what we’ve got, I think we’ve GOT to help to instill a true work ethic into our
kids that are growing up in this “hand-me” society. A little hard work never
hurt anybody. If work was meant to be easy, it wouldn’t be called work, it’d be
called play. Sadly, though I’m sure that we would all find problems with play
if we knew we had to do it. I hope not!
Tune in next week for my continued motivational blogging!
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