Article

Fall Back In Love With Your Job? Here's How!

Topic: LeadershipBy Eileen McDargh, CSP, CPAEPublished Recently added

Legacy signals

Legacy popularity: 1,133 legacy views

USA TODAY, recently ran a full-page article of Kerry Hannon's book Love Your Job. She rightfully quotes the latest stats that just 30% of the American workforce is engaged at work. She goes on to relay that most people either don't want to leave for another career or are simply putting in time to protect income and health insurance.

That's a fine kettle of fish! So if leaving is not in the cards and merely putting up with work to collect a paycheck are the only options, I conclude 70% of the workforce are doomed!!

Unless... unless they begin to take charge of their own ecosystem and self-management. That's what resiliency is all about. It is not about settling. It's about stirring the pot.

1. Stir your imagination. That's right: think more broadly about what you could do that would stretch your skills, add to your interest AND provide value for the organization. You might need a series of other "imagineers" who would help you consider possibilities. Make sure the people you ask are not those recognized as naysayers and whiners.

2. Beware of your negative imagination. That's the voice that will tell you why everything is bad, why it won't work, and on and on and on. Listen to your imagineers without judgment.

3. Ask. If you don't ask, you can't get. Don't assume that your manager has any clue about what would re-engage your spirit. Mindreading, as far as I can tell, is only found in Vegas shows.

4. Think contribution. Research continually demonstrates that people who help others are far happier than those who are only internally focused. Help might be assisting a colleague, mentoring a new employee (and asking them to teach you something in return) or it could even be as simple as giving out a smile or making someone laugh. That could actually be a huge contribution to someone's day. Big Sam was the all-around maintenance man for an assisted living center. His hugs were gigantic and welcomed. Sure, he could fix the garbage disposal in the kitchen but it was the way he dispensed caring that mattered the most to family and residents.

5. Leave well. Years ago, I was giving a seminar on difficult people. An older woman in the audience stood up and proclaimed how she worked for nothing but miserable people, how bad her job was, the company stunk, etc. etc. "In two years, I'll retire and be out of there," she sneered as she looked around the room. I suggested she really had two choices. She could continue her negative discourse about every one and everything so that when she did leave, people would say, "Thank goodness she is gone!" Or, she could figure out how to make herself so useful and other-focused so that when she left, colleagues would miss her deeply. Her choice.

My hope is that these simple ides prove useful. Just try one. For more in-depth ideas I have a recommendation. Colleagues Beverly Kaye and Sharon Jordan-Evans wrote a marvelous, simple, action-packed book with 26 ways to get what you want at work. If you work for other folks, "Love it. Don't Leave It" belongs on your desk.

What have you tried that turned work around for you IF you were in a place where you felt you could not leave? Let's chat!

© 2015, The Resiliency Group. Publication rights granted to all venues so long as article and by-line are reprinted intact and all links are made live.

Article author

About the Author

Motivational speaker, consultant and author Eileen McDargh has helped organizations and individuals transform the life of their business and the business of their life through conversations that matter and connections that count. Visit http://www.eileenmcdargh.com to read her blog, join her e-zine and hire her to speak. Her newest book "Your Resiliency GPS" is a guidebook for dealing with change. Learn more at http://www.yourresiliencygps.com.

Further reading

Further Reading

4 total

Article

In a time when professional uncertainty is the norm, resilience has become a top priority; not just for entrepreneurs, but for anyone looking to stay relevant and grounded in a fast-changing world. One leader who’s built his reputation on this kind of consistency is Nathan Levinson , Founder and CEO of Royal York Property Management .rnWhile Levinson is best known for pioneering the world’s first rental income guarantee and growing one of Canada’s largest property manag

September 10, 2025

Article

The leadership conversation often centers on doing more—acquiring more knowledge, setting bigger goals, and chasing louder victories. But what if the real key to growth has less to do with adding and everything to do with aligning? Christopher Terry, respected mentor and teacher, is challenging this performance-focused mindset. His philosophy offers an alte ative: the quiet power of inner work, where clarity, presence, and identity guide action more than any exte al metric ev

June 27, 2025

Article

Storm Boswick explains that great leaders don’t just chart the course; they articulate the journey. While many leadership qualities are hailed as essential, such as vision, decisiveness, and integrity, none of them matter without one indispensable skill: communication. From small startups to multinational corporations, effective communication sits at the heart of impactful leadership. Without it, even the best strategies can unravel, and the most cohesive teams can falter.

May 20, 2025

Article

In the modern business landscape, technology is not merely a tool but a strategic necessity. From streamlining operations to engaging customers and enhancing products, technology holds the key to staying competitive and achieving sustainable growth. Successful CEOs understand the value of tech investments and actively incorporate them into their business strategies to lead their companies to new heights. The Importance of Technology Investments 1. Operational Efficiency Techn

November 19, 2024