Saturday, May 9, 2020

The most thorough review of my book. Ever! - The Chief Happiness Officer Blog

The most thorough review of my book. Ever! - The Chief Happiness Officer Blog A while back, I invited Kevin Carson of The Mutualist Blog to review my book (Happy Hour is 9 to 5) for the simple reason that he and I have wildly differently views on work. Its not that we disagree (though we do on many issues) its just that were coming to the topic from some very different backgrounds. His review is now up and it blows me away! Its thorough, its critical and above all its constructive. I learned a lot from reading it and from taking in Kevins views on this. As I knew I would. Heres how Kevin starts it: I must confess I approached this book with a considerable amount of skepticism. And at first glance, the rhetoric in Kjerulfs book bears at least a strong superficial resemblance to such manipulative HR gimmicks as Fish! Philosophy, aimed at jollying the sped-up and underpaid workforces of downsized firms into loving Big Brother without any of the inconvenience of, you know, raising pay or decreasing workloads. But on closer inspection, I believe this book is the real thing. Despite certain reservations, which I discuss at length below, I believe Kjerulf gets it. His book isnt just another attempt to get workers minds right, a shortcut for inculating lobotomized happiness into people who are treated like shit. He spends a major part of the book, in fact, pointing out that shortcuts dont work, and that theres no way to simulate treating people like human beings. Kevins main reservations about my book are: 1: The book goes too far in stressing subjective attitude at the expense of objective conditions. For example, the employee newsletter at a particular hospital Im thinking oflets call it the Official Happy Newsletteronce ran a fluff article titled Choose Your Attitude, which gushed (among other things) that if we choose to provide extraordinary patient care, we could do so, regardless of your abundance or lack of resources. In other words, the people who cut us off at the knees are assuring us that if we cant run a marathon, its our own fault. The laws of time, space, and matter dont applyits all in your head, man! The amount of work that can be extracted from a single man-hour is infinite, like the number of people who can be fed with five loaves and two fishes. I agree with Kevin on this. What I really advocate is not changing your attitude to cope with a bad work situation but as Kevin puts it: Happiness and choosing your attitude are not things done instead of addressing working conditions, or even after addressing working conditions; theyre achieved, in large part, by means of addressing working conditions. Yes. Kevin gets this better than I did! Ill update my writing on this to express this more clearly. 2: There is not enough focus on the structural forces at the level of the political and economic system as a whole. Thirty years ago the neoliberal Pharaohs decreed, let them gather their own straw, but let not the tale of bricks be minished aught. And in the years since that decree, an entire industry of labor consultants has come up with gimmicks like Fish! (enthusiatically embraced by Pharaohs overseers in Human Resources) aimed at convincing workers that we [sic] can choose to do an extraordinary job making bricks, regardless of our abundance or lack of straw. In minimizing the importance of objective conditions, Kjerulf considers mainly the intrinsic character of the work itself. That is, he focuses mainly on the character of work as it varies from one job to another, as workers sort themselves into types of work that they consider more intrinsically enjoyable and avoid those that they consider unpleasant. True my focus is very much on making yourself happy at work within the system we already have. And its also true as Kevin notes, that the current system is fertile ground for some VERY unhappy workplaces. However, the current system has proven, mostly inadvertently, to also contain everything you need to create great, democratic, happy workplaces. I absolutely agree that the system itself should be changed and I believe that one of the best ways to change it is to create many happy workplaces. They will out compete the unhappy ones and happiness at work will then become the norm. That being said, I WILL be reading some Ehrenreich :o) 3: A historical vacuum One of the most exasperating things about Kjerulfs book is the historical vacuum within which he views such issues. It boggles my mind that Kjerulf simply accepts this enormous and radical change over the past fifty years as just another matter of fact, without stopping to ask why? Why has the workplace hollowed out the rest of life in recent decades? Why has an increasing portion of time been taken up by work, at the expense of the rest of our lives? Why is work (on the job, that is) the basis for our standard of living, as opposed to the household and informal economies? Why has the home been transformed into an adjunct of the imperial workplace, and the whole of life contaminated by the ideology of professionalism? Maybe its time to take our lives back from workor rather, from our jobs. The main reason I ignore the history of the workplaces is probably that I dont know much about it. Ill be fixing that :o) Fortunately, theres an equally long list of where Kevin thinks the book gets it right. Phew :o) Go read Kevins entire review its great, great reading. I cannot thank Kevin enough for reading my book with such an open mind and for contributing his thoughts and ideas in such a clear, constructive, interesting, funny and well-written way. Its a huge inspiration for me and has shown me some ways to deepen and sharpen my message. Thanks for visiting my blog. If you're new here, you should check out this list of my 10 most popular articles. And if you want more great tips and ideas you should check out our newsletter about happiness at work. It's great and it's free :-)Share this:LinkedInFacebookTwitterRedditPinterest Related

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.