Work, paradoxically, is a blessing and a curse. It can
torture us when we have it and depress us when we don't. What's worse, loading
"Sixteen Tons" of manure from "9 to 5"on "Maggie's Farm" after "A Hard Day's
Night," or having to beg, "Brother, Can You Spare a Dime" in "Allentown" because
the "Unemployment Blues" means "I Ain't Got No Home in this World Anymore"?
The agony of feeling useless that's inflicted on the
reluctantly unemployed is a separate matter. This post offers some
psychological insight to help workers find greater enjoyment and creativity in
their labor. Work satisfies basic physical, psychological, and emotional needs,
yet people can find opportunities to suffer even when they hold excellent jobs.
A straightforward psychological principle assures
greater enjoyment and creativity in the workplace: Once we manage to avoid
unnecessary emotional suffering, we're much more capable of appreciating our
work and being successful at it.
Emotional suffering is related to the state of our
psyche, in conjunction with the extent of our self-knowledge. When our psyche
is contaminated by unresolved issues and conflict, we can suffer anywhere,
anytime. In fact, unconsciously we often go looking for ways to suffer. For
some, even a beautiful sunny day on the golf course can be a time of
frustration and disappointment.
How do we sabotage the satisfaction and joy that work
can produce? One way is to feel controlled and dominated by supervisors or
bosses. Often we feel this kind of tension even when the boss is being
appropriate and just doing his or her job. Many of us carry an unresolved
conflict in our psyche: We hate feeling controlled, yet the feeling is familiar
from our past. We're emotionally inclined to interpret different situations
through that impression of being controlled. Actually, the feeling is not so
much about being controlled as it is about feeling we're being forced to submit
to the person with the power. The big hurt is feeling that we're somehow a
lesser person because of our "required" submission.
Your boss might not actually be controlling or
dominating you. However, if you have an unresolved issue with feeling
controlled, you're programmed, in a sense, to feel that you're being
controlled, dominated, and forced to submit. Your impression of reality becomes
subjective, not objective. You slip into an old, familiar feeling of submission
that you believe your boss is causing you to feel. This means you're failing to
perceive or understand your lingering affinity for that disagreeable feeling. The
feeling originates from old memories of childhood "submission" to the necessary
requirements of socialization. The rage of the child during the "terrible twos"
is the loud protest against the feeling of being forced to comply with (submit
to) the authority of parents. As adults, we fail to see this part in us that's
willing to relive those old affronts to our childish stubbornness. Instead, we
blame the boss for inappropriately trying to control us.
Sometimes, of course, the boss is actually a controlling
personality. This can make it even easier for us to feel controlled. If we
don't have an unresolved issue with feeling controlled, we won't suffer even if
our boss is actually being a jerk and assuming a controlling, dominant posture.
When we see our unconscious participation in producing conflict, we don't get
triggered by the boss. We don't feel dominated by the boss, whether he or she
is a petty tyrant or not. If the boss is dysfunctional, we don't take
personally his or her directives or tactics. We're able to do our work, maybe
even enjoy it, without feeling like a slave or some lesser person. However,
we're only able to be cool and detached in this way when we have resolved or at
least recognized our emotional weakness for feeling that we're being forced to
submit.
We can also muffle or stifle the satisfaction of work
by feeling devalued and unappreciated. It's the sense that both our work and
our own person are not appreciated. With bosses and coworkers, we can feel
we're not respected and valued. This introduces other emotional issues.
Unconsciously, we may be inclined to lug along wherever we go our expectations
of rejection, criticism, or disapproval. Such expectations, like the
expectation of being forced to submit, are mostly unconscious. Consciously, we hate the rejection or
the criticism; unconsciously, we
expect them and can be compelled to replay those feelings.
This is the ambiguous nature of inner conflict; We hate
certain unpleasant feelings on one hand, but expect them and go looking for
them on the other hand. Before we can resolve such conflict we need to make it
conscious. We especially have to become conscious of our emotional attachment
to negative emotions such as rejection or criticism. This means we need to
expose in our psyche our own secret willingness to replay and recycle these
unresolved painful emotions in the different situations in which they can
arise.
Other psychological issues that can produce agony in
the workplace also originate from within us. These include expectations
concerning failure, along with problems of procrastination, blocked creativity,
and personality clashes.
Many of us feel like failures, even when we're
relatively successful. Our inner critic (superego) can rule our personality
with unreasonable demands and unfair accusations. We can be particularly
vulnerable to inner critic attacks because we carry in our psyche an ego-ideal. This is an unconscious
self-concept that derives from the self-centeredness with which we are born.
Children are speaking under the influence of their ego-ideal when they boast
about or think about the great accomplishments they will achieve in the future:
"I'm going to be president when I grow up," or "I'm going to be the greatest
artist in the world." Sigmund Freud discovered the existence of the ego-ideal,
and in 1914 he wrote that what a person "projects before him as his ideal is
the substitute for the lost narcissism of his childhood in which he was his own
ideal."
This means that, while acute self-centeredness fades as
the child ages, the child still maintains remnants of grandiosity in the
ego-ideal. This inner agency can become a serious liability for adults. That's
because our inner critic unjustly torments us for not living up to the
illusions of our ego-ideal.