Being busy all the time is a habit you made. You can unmake it. | Dan Pontefract | Big Think
Being busy all the time is a habit you made. You can unmake it.
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One-third of us are suffering from chronic stress in the workplace. Other studies suggest that half of us bring our work stress home, creating stress in our personal lives.
Being busy has become a cultural obsession. But it’s not the golden badge of honor we think it is. Dan Pontefract points out that there’s a big difference between being busy and being productive.
The best productivity hack? Schedule a break. That means eating lunch away from your desk. Saying hello to people around you. Keep a graph in your mind that has ’action’ on the x-axis and ’reflection’ on the y-axis. Where do you sit on that graph?
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DAN PONTEFRACT:
Dan Pontefract is Chief Envisioner at TELUS, where he heads the Transformation Office, a future-of-work consulting group that helps organizations enhance their corporate cultures and collaboration practices. Dan is an adjunct professor at the University of Victoria Gustavson School of Business and is the author of several acclaimed books. Follow him on Twitter at @dpontefract.
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TRANSCRIPT:
DAN PONTEFRACT: The current approach today is essentially we’ve entered into a culture of freneticism—that’s a Big Think word, and that means we’re really busy. But I believe we’ve created the business on ourselves. Ultimately we’ve become distracted by— squirrel!—the next thing that pops into our head or the next thing that pops onto our device or the next thing that pops into our laptop; we’re addressing it. And for some reason, we think it’s a good idea to attend to every notification, every want of an employee, every need of a boss. And so we are loading ourselves up with more to do. We are ultimately working on the next thing while we’re doing the current thing at the same time. We think that multitasking is a badge of honor.
We think that “do more with less“ is the corporate mantra that’s going to take us to gold medal plates. And it’s frightening. And what we need to do is to take a step back and say, “How did we get here, is it good, and what’s in store for the future?“
Right now, I mean ultimately, our team members, our bosses, our leaders are walking around like zombies, and it’s not good. We go from one meeting to another. We’re in a peripatetic state. We’re just ultimately going from the 8:00 to the 9:00 to the 10:00 to the 11:00. We used to go out for lunch and pause, but now we go get lunch, we bring it to our desk and we stare at another device trying to catch up with everything we haven’t done between 8:00 and 12:00, and then we go to the next meeting at 1:00, and we end up at 5:00. And then maybe we pick up the kids or we’ve got to go to soccer practice. And instead of looking at the soccer practice and the kids at that soccer practice we’re looking at our device, because there’s eight more texts and 15 more emails that have come in. And now it’s 7:00 and you’ve got to make dinner. And at 7:00 and it’s dinner you’re like, “Well, I don’t actually know how to make dinner anymore,“ so you order. And then while you’re ordering you’re attending to all your social ’re saying, “Oh! Well, I forgot how much I like dopamine, so I like those red things on my phone and my laptop that say, ’Hey, I’ve got eight likes on Instagram and 24 likes on Facebook’. Maybe I’ll post more.“
And then all of a sudden 16 more emails come in and you’ve got 14 more tasks to do because now you’re at 9:00. “Well, I don’t know, maybe I should just watch something.“ And so you binge watch Netflix for the fifteenth time and then it’s 12:00 and you do the same thing over again.
So, for some reason, we think this is a good thing. We think that being constantly busy without having the pause, the meandering of thought, the marination in the moment; we think that we’ve just got to be constantly on and that’s a good thing. But it’s not. What we’re doing is creating balls of cortisol. That means that we’ve got cortisol emitting from every orifice in our body.
We see that the APA is telling us that our levels of stress have increased since 1980 to a point where one-third of us are suffering from chronic stress in the workplace. We see other studies that suggest that half of us bring that state of stress home creating personal stress in our personal lives. So how is this good, when we’re walking around with balls of cortisol emitting from every orifice? I don’t see where this ends well for us in society...
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