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><channel><title>stress &#8211; Fearless Ink</title> <atom:link href="http://fearlessink.com/tag/stress/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" /><link>https://fearlessink.com</link> <description>Where excellent writing meets good business for outstanding results</description> <lastBuildDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2020 11:12:50 +0000</lastBuildDate> <language>en-US</language> <sy:updatePeriod> hourly </sy:updatePeriod> <sy:updateFrequency> 1 </sy:updateFrequency> <generator>https://wordpress.org/?v=5.8.13</generator> <item><title>Ink-Dipped Advice: Time to Reinvent Work</title><link>https://fearlessink.com/2020/07/15/ink-dipped-advice-time-to-reinvent-work/</link> <comments>https://fearlessink.com/2020/07/15/ink-dipped-advice-time-to-reinvent-work/#comments</comments> <dc:creator><![CDATA[The Writer]]></dc:creator> <pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2020 11:12:50 +0000</pubDate> <category><![CDATA[Business Writing]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Craft]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Passion]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Values]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Work habits]]></category> <category><![CDATA[affordable housing]]></category> <category><![CDATA[beneifts]]></category> <category><![CDATA[fear]]></category> <category><![CDATA[health insurance]]></category> <category><![CDATA[job search]]></category> <category><![CDATA[pandeimic]]></category> <category><![CDATA[profit]]></category> <category><![CDATA[restructuring]]></category> <category><![CDATA[stress]]></category> <category><![CDATA[The human workplace]]></category> <category><![CDATA[UBI]]></category> <category><![CDATA[wage]]></category> <category><![CDATA[work environment]]></category> <guid
isPermaLink="false">https://fearlessink.com/?p=661</guid><description><![CDATA[There are too many stresses in our daily lives right now: the fact that leaving the house can kill us, bosses who don’t believe we are actually working unless they can stare at us; job loss, which too often means the loss of health insurance, unemployment benefits running out, a government who would rather see &#8230; <a
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class="screen-reader-text"> "Ink-Dipped Advice: Time to Reinvent Work"</span></a>]]></description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[
<figure
class="wp-block-image"><img
loading="lazy" width="1024" height="683" src="https://fearlessink.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/time-371226_1920-2-1024x683.jpg?6bfec1&amp;6bfec1" alt="" class="wp-image-662" srcset="https://fearlessink.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/time-371226_1920-2-1024x683.jpg 1024w, https://fearlessink.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/time-371226_1920-2-300x200.jpg 300w, https://fearlessink.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/time-371226_1920-2-768x512.jpg 768w, https://fearlessink.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/time-371226_1920-2-1200x800.jpg 1200w, https://fearlessink.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/time-371226_1920-2.jpg 1920w" sizes="(max-width: 709px) 85vw, (max-width: 909px) 67vw, (max-width: 1362px) 62vw, 840px" /><figcaption>Image courtesy of Free-Photos via pixabay.com</figcaption></figure><p>There are too many
stresses in our daily lives right now: the fact that leaving the house can kill
us, bosses who don’t believe we are actually working unless they can stare at
us; job loss, which too often means the loss of health insurance, unemployment
benefits running out, a government who would rather see us die en masse for
their personal profit than give us tools to live with basic human dignity, and
so forth.</p><p>We are exhausted.</p><p>And yet, this is the time,
as everything falls apart is when we have to carve out the time, in spite of
the stress, to reinvent and rebuild the society we want.</p><p>Part of that is to
reinvent work.</p><p><strong>Life in the Arts</strong></p><p>I spent decades working
professionally in theatre, film, and television production. &nbsp;Yes, until I started working off Broadway full
time, and then on Broadway full time, I often took stopgap jobs in offices and
temp jobs along the way.</p><p>People who claim they want
a career in the arts but feel stuck in their day jobs constantly ask me how I
could earn enough to live on in the arts.</p><p>Because I was ruthless in
the knowledge and practice that any day job was just that – temporary. Its only
purpose was to make it possible for me to work in the arts. If and when it
interfered with a paying theatre job, it was the day job that was chucked. I
NEVER turned down a paid (emphasis on “paid”) job in the arts because it meant
quitting a day job.</p><p>Even knowing that theatre
and film jobs are temporary and transitory.</p><p>“But I have
responsibilities!” People whine.</p><p>You think I don’t? I have
been earning my way since I was a teenager. At a certain point, I became the
breadwinner and caretaker of other members of my family. Sometimes I have been
that for my family of choice as well. I have responsibilities.</p><p>But I was committed to my
career choice, and every work decision was made around building that career,
not conforming to other people’s definition of “real work.” Believe me, my
entire life, I’ve heard “when are you going to get a REAL job?” This is from
people who couldn’t last a single day if they had to work a full Broadway
production schedule or an 18-hour day on a film set.</p><p>I knew what I wanted from
my career, and I did it.</p><p>Too often, people claim
they want a career in the arts. But it’s easy to fall into a corporate job with
a regular salary. If you CHOOSE that route, it’s perfectly valid. But own the
choice. Don’t pretend the corporate job and your “responsibilities” prevent you
from doing the work you claim you want to do. The only thing standing in your
way is you.</p><p>The other important
element is to dump unsupportive partners. Because I am driven and organized,
too many men tried to get me to give up my dream and focus that energy and
drive on theirs. Not one of them were worth it, and getting every single one of
them out of my life was the right choice. I’ve had some great men in my life,
but I knew even the good ones couldn’t sustain the lifelong journey. The ones
who tried to sabotage me were kicked to the curb pretty damn fast.</p><p>If my career choice had
been in the stock market or in finance or medicine or law, no one would have
ever questioned the dedication or the long hours. But, because it’s in the
arts, everybody’s a critic.</p><p>I consider myself still
working in the arts, even with the business and marketing writing I do. I work
hard to balance the writing other people pay me to do with the novels, plays,
and radio plays I write.</p><p>That doesn’t mean I
consider business writing a “day job” and fiction/scripting my “real” writing. They
are both creative. I love working with businesses who are passionate about what
they do, and communicating that passion in a way that enchants, engages, and
expands their audience. It’s my real work as much as writing a novel or a play
is real work. It’s a facet of my career.</p><p><strong>Pandemic Aftershocks</strong></p><p>Since we’re still in the
middle of a worsening pandemic, thanks to the lack of leadership and inhumanity
at the Federal level, we don’t know the full extent of the aftershocks or how long
they take.</p><p>Artists are finding new
ways to create, engage, and entertain an audience. Production skills will also
evolve. The need for art is growing, not ceasing, and I believe that theatre,
film, music, dance, visual arts – all of these will grow and find new ways to
connect with audiences.</p><p>Businesses need good
writers more than ever. One of the analytics companies (I can’t find the link,
apologies) figures that businesses that didn’t communicate with their audience
during the pandemic lost up to 78% of that audience.</p><p>Businesses that
communicate poorly with their audiences are also taking a hit. Life is
different now. Tossing out over-used catchphrases that wore out their welcome
back in March, or pretending it’s all over and everything is back to the way it
was hurts your audience. I know, as a consumer, reading some of the ridiculous
marketing schemes cause me physical pain. I turn away.</p><p>I am not likely to turn
back.</p><p>Businesses that allow
customers inside without a mask, or to slide the mask down once inside? I walk
out. I don’t spend money there. Nor will I come back once there’s a vaccine,
and we are safely able to resume a semblance of former activities.</p><p>They have lost my business
permanently.</p><p><strong>Rebuilding Work</strong></p><p>One of the significant truths
the shutdowns and stay-at-home orders revealed is that few office jobs need to
be done in corporate space.</p><p>The day is often
structured differently, especially if childcare and children’s online learning
are involved. But the work can be done remotely.</p><p>Those of us who’ve worked
remotely for a company and/or as freelancers already knew that. We’ve had to
fight to because corporations find it useful to promote the toxic myth that it’s
not “real work” unless it’s in THEIR space where they can monitor you.</p><p>They’re wrong.</p><p>It’s time not to return to
that model. Where constant interruptions, unnecessary meetings to give a
bombastic executive an audience, and a workday structured for least
productivity but maximum low morale are considered “normal.”</p><p>We were groomed – and I
use that triggering word deliberately – by corporations to believe that this
type of work day and work environment was the only “real work.”</p><p>We’ve learned differently.</p><p>Yes, certain jobs need to
be done on site. But plenty of office jobs can be done virtually. If some
workers prefer the community office environment, they should have that option,
once it’s safe. But for those who are more productive, as long as they hit
their deadlines and deliver, the option to work remotely should be permanent.</p><p><strong>Tools for Positive
Change</strong></p><p><strong>UBI.</strong> Universal Basic Income gives everyone a chance for basic human dignity. Especially during the pandemic, it allows people to pay the bills, keep a roof over their head, food on the table, and, most importantly, to stay home. It allows them to put money back into the economy for all of the above, and maybe even support some small businesses and artisans. That slows the spread of the infection, gives the medical community time to come up with vaccines and treatments, and save lives. If people aren’t putting their lives at risk daily, forced to go back into unsafe environments, but are allowed dignity, many of them will be able to create, invent, and come up with ideas that will positively transform their lives and our world that we can’t even yet imagine.</p><p><strong>Health insurance not
connected to jobs.</strong> Too many people
are forced to stay in negative work situations because they are afraid of
losing their health insurance. Then we hit a depression, like the one we’re in
now, and they lost the job and the health insurance anyway. This needs to stop.
Health insurance needs to be connected to the individual, and travel with the
person from job to job. Part of that restructuring includes changing insurance from
profit to non-profit companies, and removing stock options.</p><p><strong>Benefits not tied to
the job.</strong> EVERY job, even part-time
and 1099 jobs, should have to toss a few dollars ON TOP OF (not deducted from)
every paycheck into a pot tied to the individual for unemployment, paid time
off, and retirement. IN ADDITION to money tossed into the insurance pot.</p><p><strong>Affordable internet
everywhere.</strong> Remote workers contribute
to their local economies. They buy food, pay taxes, hopefully shop locally when
they can, participate in their communities. It’s vital to keep people connected
with affordable technology in the most rural areas. And people need options. No
single corporation can be allowed to monopolize any utility.</p><p><strong>The next generation
doesn’t owe it to us to suffer.</strong> I am
so sick and tired of hearing “well, I had to work hard, and no one wants to
work anymore.” People do want to work hard, but they also want to work
differently. &nbsp;We should be making it
better for the next generation, and then they make it better for the following
generation and so forth and so on. &nbsp;The
previous generation broke barriers. Instead of regressing (like we’ve done the
past years), it’s time for us to break barriers.</p><p><strong>Fair pay for a day’s
work. And benefits.</strong> &nbsp;UBI doesn’t negate the need for fair pay. If
you aren’t willing to pay a living wage, and throw benefits into a pot for the
individual, you don’t get to have employees. Do the damn work yourself. And let’s
stop this only paying a 35-hour week or a 37.5-hour week. Or working 8-5
instead of 9-5 if someone wants to eat. You want me to work for you all damn
day? You can damn well pay me for a LUNCH HOUR.</p><p><strong>Affordable housing.</strong> What developers present as “affordable” housing isn’t.
&nbsp;The formula for affordable housing needs
to be 30% of a month of 40-hour weeks at the minimum wage for that state. THAT
is affordable. No one should have to work multiple jobs in order to pay rent,
and rent should not be 80% of a person’s income (which it too often is).</p><p><strong>How Do We Get There?</strong></p><p>Millions of us are out of
work right now, and worried. Perhaps even desperate. Corporations are counting
on that. They got millions of dollars in SBA loans, have bought back stocks,
paid bonuses to top execs, and laid off the people who do the actual work. Now,
they want to hire people back at lower rates without benefits because “the economy.”</p><p>If you have to take
anything that comes along, then do what you need to do.</p><p>But take Liz Ryan’s advice over on T<a
href="https://humanworkplace.com/">he Human Workplace</a>, and always be looking for another job. Consider it a temp job. Keep looking, pitching, sending out resumes and LOIs, talking to people, expanding your network.</p><p>As soon as you get a
better opportunity, take it. Companies stopped being loyal to their employees
decades ago. They blame the employees, saying they jump to a different job
after two years and “don’t want to work.” Hmm, maybe if companies paid decent
wages, benefits, funded pension plans (which are EARNED benefits as much as
Social Security is an &nbsp;EARNED benefit)
and treated their employees with decency and dignity, their employees would
stay.</p><p>Don’t believe corporate
spin. Take what you need to survive. Jump when something better comes along.
Misplaced loyalty will destroy you every time.</p><p><strong>Take Stock. Then Take
Steps.</strong></p><p>In and amongst the worry
(and we’re all worried, on so many fronts right now), take stock of the career
you’ve had and the career you want. Where are they aligned? Where are they
apart? Where are they in conflict?</p><p>Start taking small actions
every day to move towards the career you want. Fifteen minutes a day working
towards both the kind of work you want to do and the environment in which you
want to do it.</p><p>Then DO.</p><p><strong>Work with your elected
officials</strong> on town, state, and Federal
levels. Let them know what you want out of your society. HELP them get there.
It’s not just about donating money. It’s about regular communication so they
can represent you, and it’s about ideas. Write proposals, with detailed action
steps.</p><p>That helps them, and hones
skills you can use in a variety of jobs.</p><p><strong>Read bills</strong> coming up for a vote, and let your elected officials
know how you feel about them. They can’t represent you if you don’t
communicate.</p><p>You can read Federal bills coming up for a vote <em><a
href="https://www.govtrack.us/congress/bills/">here</a><a
href="https://www.govtrack.us/congress/bills/">.</a></em>.</p><p>Your state and town will have
information on their websites. It doesn’t take that much time to keep up on these
bills, and it pays off in every aspect of your life, because it affects every
aspect of your life.</p><p><strong>Vote.</strong> In EVERY election.</p><p><strong>Say No. </strong>Speak up at work. Speak up in interviews. Companies
are counting on us to be terrified and desperate. If enough of us say no, they
have to change the way they treat workers, or go out of business. Find people
with similar work and life sensibilities, and become entrepreneurs. Terrifying,
right? But also fulfilling. You can do better work on your own and be a better
boss than those who mistreated you.</p><p>Yes, it’s terrifying and
overwhelming at times. Start slowly. Rest when you need to. But remember that
you owe your best energy and creativity to making YOUR life a work of art, not
creating something for others to profit from in perpetuity.</p><p>How are you reinventing
work from what you’ve learned during the pandemic?</p> ]]></content:encoded> <wfw:commentRss>https://fearlessink.com/2020/07/15/ink-dipped-advice-time-to-reinvent-work/feed/</wfw:commentRss> <slash:comments>1</slash:comments> </item> </channel> </rss>