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把時(shí)間都獻(xiàn)給工作的“殉道者”

所屬教程:英語(yǔ)漫讀

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2020年03月11日

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Binal Patel is the first person to admit he’s a work martyr and that he’s been suffering from mild burnout by sacrificing all of his free time for his career.

比納爾·帕特爾(Binal Patel)是第一個(gè)承認(rèn)自己是"工作殉道者"的人,他因?yàn)榘阉械淖杂蓵r(shí)間都奉獻(xiàn)給工作而感到精疲力盡。

The 25-year old data scientist from Raleigh, North Carolina in the US, says his problems began two years ago when he dove headfirst into a new job at a start-up running analytics for the healthcare industry. There were just 12 employees at the time, and Patel remembers setting the bar a bit too high, working “12 hours a day at 200%.”

這位來(lái)自美國(guó)北卡羅來(lái)納州羅利市的25歲數(shù)據(jù)科學(xué)家表示,他的問(wèn)題始于兩年前,他當(dāng)時(shí)一心想著加入一家創(chuàng)業(yè)公司,為醫(yī)療行業(yè)分析數(shù)據(jù)。該公司當(dāng)時(shí)只有12名員工,而帕特爾清楚地記得自己當(dāng)時(shí)把標(biāo)準(zhǔn)定得過(guò)高:"每天工作12小時(shí),完成200%的工作量。"

At first, the positive recognition was addicting, but the recent university graduate soon realised that taking on masochistic amounts of work was unsustainable.

他人的積極認(rèn)可起初令人上癮,但這個(gè)剛剛從大學(xué)畢業(yè)不久的年輕人很快意識(shí)到,這種自虐式的工作方式根本不可持續(xù)。

“Over time, your company expects you to work at that initial level because that’s what you’ve done before, and you expect yourself to be at that level because that’s what you’ve been putting in,” he says. “But working that hard all the time just isn’t feasible.”

"久而久之,你的公司會(huì)期望你按照最初的水平來(lái)工作,因?yàn)槟阒熬褪沁@么干的。你自己也希望達(dá)到這種水平,因?yàn)槟愕拇_做到過(guò)。"他說(shuō),"但一直這么努力工作根本不可行。"

Patel found himself becoming less productive and efficient the more hours he put in. He says it took an emotional toll, too, “because you expect yourself to be at a higher level.”

帕特爾發(fā)現(xiàn),工作時(shí)間越長(zhǎng),工作效果和工作效率就越差。這還會(huì)影響情緒,"因?yàn)槟阆M约耗苓_(dá)到更高的水平。"

把時(shí)間都獻(xiàn)給工作的“殉道者”

Patel is not alone in this predicament. According to a new study from The Workforce Institute at Kronos, 81% of salaried employees in the US report that they work outside of their standard work hours, with 29% doing it three or more days per week. A separate study from the US-based Project: Time Off campaign found that millennials, in particular, are much more likely to become work martyrs than their older peers at a rate of 43%, compared with an average of just 29% across all workers.

帕特爾并非個(gè)例。根據(jù)克勞羅斯勞動(dòng)力研究院(The Workforce Institute at Kronos)的數(shù)據(jù),美國(guó)有81%受薪雇員有過(guò)加班經(jīng)歷,29%每周至少加班3天。另外一項(xiàng)名為Project:Time Off的研究也發(fā)現(xiàn),"千禧一代"比老一輩更有可能成為"工作殉道者",比例達(dá)到43%;而所有勞動(dòng)者的平均比例僅為29%。

Experts caution that more time in the office doesn’t equate to a better worker, and that bosses need to set clear goals to prevent building potential team burnout into their plans. If not, the repercussions of a stressed-out workforce will become more pronounced as millennials move into management roles and expect the same level of presenteeism from their subordinates.

專(zhuān)家警告稱(chēng),在辦公室里待的時(shí)間越長(zhǎng),未必表示員工越稱(chēng)職,而老板也需要設(shè)定明確的目標(biāo),避免因?yàn)樽约褐贫ǖ挠?jì)劃導(dǎo)致整個(gè)團(tuán)隊(duì)精疲力盡。否則,當(dāng)千禧一代擔(dān)任管理職位時(shí),過(guò)量工作產(chǎn)生的影響就會(huì)更加嚴(yán)重,因?yàn)樗麄儠?huì)期待自己的手下也表現(xiàn)出同等程度的"出勤主義"。

“What’s the future of our work-life balance if this is the mentality we’re fostering,” says Katie Denis, lead researcher at Project: Time Off. There needs to be a drastic change in attitude among millennials, “or we’ll see much bigger problems on the horizon.”

"如果我們正在形成這樣的心態(tài),那么工作與生活之間的平衡未來(lái)將變成什么樣子?"Project:Time Off首席研究員凱蒂·丹尼斯(Katie Denis)說(shuō)。千禧一代需要大幅調(diào)整自己的態(tài)度,"否則會(huì)引發(fā)更加嚴(yán)重的問(wèn)題。"

Studies from Marianna Virtanen of the Finnish Institute of Occupational Health have linked overworking with numerous stress-related health problems, including depression, impaired sleep and heavy drinking. Meanwhile, a new study of American, Australian and European workers found that those putting in 55 hours or more per week had a 33% greater risk of stroke and 13% greater risk of coronary heart disease when compared with their peers working a standard 40-hour week.

芬蘭勞動(dòng)衛(wèi)生研究所的瑪麗安娜·維爾塔寧(Marianna Virtanen)進(jìn)行的研究,將過(guò)度工作跟很多與壓力有關(guān)的健康問(wèn)題關(guān)聯(lián)起來(lái),包括抑郁癥、睡眠障礙和嚴(yán)重酗酒。與此同時(shí),針對(duì)美國(guó)、澳大利亞和歐洲職場(chǎng)人士的一份新研究發(fā)現(xiàn),與每周工作40小時(shí)的人相比,每周至少工作55小時(shí)的人中風(fēng)風(fēng)險(xiǎn)增加33%,冠心病風(fēng)險(xiǎn)也增加13%。

Fear and uncertainty 害怕與不確定

The current work martyr trend among 18- to 35-year-olds relates to both healthy ego needs (like striving for a sense of accomplishment) and unhealthy levels of anxiety, says Denis. “You hear this popular narrative that millennials are entitled and spoiled but what we’re finding is that they actually have a lot of fear.”

丹尼斯表示,18至35歲人群目前形成的"工作殉道者"趨勢(shì)與健康的自我需要(例如追求成就感)和不健康的焦慮感都有關(guān)系。"很多人都聽(tīng)說(shuō)千禧一代嬌生慣養(yǎng),但我們卻發(fā)現(xiàn),他們內(nèi)心其實(shí)充滿恐懼。"

Denis says many millennials entered the workforce at the height of the recession when jobs were scarce. Not only that, they’re dealing with an office culture where technology is ubiquitous, yet its boundaries remain unclear with many feeling chained to their devices.

丹尼斯表示,在經(jīng)濟(jì)衰退高峰進(jìn)入職場(chǎng)的千禧一代都很沒(méi)有安全感。不僅如此,他們還要應(yīng)對(duì)充滿各種科技元素的辦公室文化,但由于工作與生活的邊界至今仍未明確,所以很多人感覺(jué)自己被束縛在自己的設(shè)備上無(wú)法掙脫。

“There’s very little guidance in the workplace about what’s appropriate [with technology], so it gives us this feeling that we need to be reachable at all times,” she says. “This fuels a kind of hyper-intense desire to prove yourself that’s playing out really strongly with millennials.”

"目前很少有一份指南能告訴我們,如何在職場(chǎng)中使用技術(shù)才是合適的,所以我們才感覺(jué)自己應(yīng)該隨時(shí)待命。"她說(shuō),"這會(huì)激發(fā)一種證明自己的強(qiáng)烈意愿。這在千禧一代中表現(xiàn)得尤其明顯。"

The Project: Time Off report found zero correlation between time spent working and career progression. Quite the contrary, “people reach a maximum threshold,” Denis explains. “Even though they may be at the office longer — or are working longer hours — it doesn’t mean they’re producing any more than their peers.”

Project:Time Off的報(bào)告發(fā)現(xiàn),工作時(shí)間與職業(yè)發(fā)展之間沒(méi)有任何相關(guān)性。恰恰相反,"人們達(dá)到了最大閾值。"丹尼斯解釋道,"即便他們?cè)谵k公室里待的時(shí)間更長(zhǎng)——或者工作時(shí)間更長(zhǎng)——但并不意味著他們比同事創(chuàng)造的價(jià)值更多。"

把時(shí)間都獻(xiàn)給工作的“殉道者”

A preventable pattern 預(yù)防措施

Ty Tucker, CEO of performance management platform REV, says it’s simple to prevent this type of workplace behaviour from occurring in the first place. “Management needs to define personal employee goals and identify how people are to be judged around performance,” he explains.

REV績(jī)效管理平臺(tái)CEO泰-塔克(Ty Tucker)表示,其實(shí)很容易從一開(kāi)始就避免這種職場(chǎng)行為的出現(xiàn)。"管理人員需要確定每個(gè)員工的目標(biāo),還要確定每個(gè)人的績(jī)效評(píng)估標(biāo)準(zhǔn)。"他解釋道。

A manager should know what could reasonably be accomplished in a 40-hour week in order to prevent burnout and make appropriate choices about budgeting, staffing and measurable objectives, he says. By working off the clock, particularly when starting out, many employees unwittingly make this task harder on their managers.

管理者應(yīng)該知道一周40小時(shí)所能完成的合理工作量,避免員工精疲力竭,從而在制定預(yù)算、人員和可以衡量的目標(biāo)時(shí)做出適當(dāng)?shù)倪x擇。通過(guò)加班工作,很多員工會(huì)在不知不覺(jué)間讓管理者的任務(wù)越來(lái)越難以完成,項(xiàng)目初期尤其如此。

Tucker believes bosses are often the biggest offenders of work martyrdom. Not only do they set the wrong tone for their employees, but they’re ultimately slowing down the business when they make themselves so indispensable to the company that nothing can happen without them.

塔克認(rèn)為,老板往往是造成"工作殉道者"的罪魁禍?zhǔn)?。他們不光為員工制定了錯(cuò)誤的基調(diào),還會(huì)最終拖累企業(yè)的發(fā)展,因?yàn)樗麄冏屍髽I(yè)離不開(kāi)自己,以至于沒(méi)有他們就無(wú)法推進(jìn)任何事情。

“When you create these bastions of isolated knowledge you are ultimately going to be less effective as an organisation,” he says.

"當(dāng)你創(chuàng)造了這些由孤立的知識(shí)構(gòu)成的堡壘時(shí),作為一個(gè)組織,你的表現(xiàn)就會(huì)變差。"他說(shuō)。

Martyrs vs heroes 殉道者vs英雄

While work martyrs can fall into a toxic trap of long hours and low productivity, Tucker believes there is a healthy alternative: the work hero.

雖然"工作殉道者"可能陷入時(shí)間長(zhǎng)、效率低的怪圈,但塔克認(rèn)為還有可能得到另外一種健康的結(jié)果:工作英雄。

“A work hero is someone who can come in, do a great job and save the day when something goes wrong,” Tucker explains. “This person is usually results driven, not time driven, and may not even be cognisant that he or she is viewed as a hero.”

"工作英雄會(huì)在出問(wèn)題時(shí)介入進(jìn)來(lái),通過(guò)優(yōu)異的表現(xiàn)挽回?cái)【帧?quot;塔克解釋道,"此人通??粗亟Y(jié)果,而非時(shí)間,他們甚至不知道自己被人當(dāng)做英雄。"

Patel, the data scientist from Raleigh, is now striving toward the latter. He starts a new job in 2017 and says he’s going to do the exact opposite of what he did when he entered his current company.

來(lái)自羅利的數(shù)據(jù)科學(xué)家帕特爾目前正在向后一個(gè)方向努力。他2017年開(kāi)始了一份新工作,希望能夠采取跟剛加入這家公司時(shí)截然相反的工作方式。

“When I start my new role it won’t be about me jumping into everything,” he says. “I’ll still do my job, of course, but I’ll make it much more of a team-based effort.”

"當(dāng)我開(kāi)始新的工作時(shí),肯定不會(huì)事必躬親。"他說(shuō),"當(dāng)然,我還是會(huì)認(rèn)真完成自己的工作,但我會(huì)更加重視團(tuán)隊(duì)合作。"


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