Tuesday, August 9, 2016

The only thing we are owed is our labor


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Just the other day, I learned in the Bhagavad Gita that the only thing I have a right to is our labor.   Seems a little harsh, not having a RIGHT to the fruits of that labor - I mean, getting something out of doing what I do is why I bother doing it in the first place.  Right?

Actually, I learned the wrongness of such thinking almost twenty years ago, back when AETNA acquired Prudential Healthcare.  Thousands of loyal Pru employees found ourselves out of jobs that many had done for decade upon decade.  

Turned out that the ones who survived & thrived were typically the ones who did the work because they got something out of it other than just praise, a paycheck, benefits;  who did it because something in them ached to be used, who did it for love of the activity rather that for the money, perks or future security.  

Sadly, I had quite a few friends & colleagues who'd never felt truly engaged in what they did, but had hauled themselves to work every day because Pru offered such great retirement benefits.  For years, they did work that didn't nurture or develop their deeper self for the sake of something they'd get when they were finished with working. 


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Then there were the friends who worked at Prudential Healthcare who also weren't crazy about what they did, but used the work as a "day" job that brought in the income that allowed them to pursue other dreams.  The work might not have developed deeper selves, but what it freed them to do DID.  

It seems to me that just as our labor is the only thing we have a right to, so too we are bound to honor that labor, whether we are fully engaged in it or not.  

Those friends who worked at PHC for retirement benefits - the ones who seemed to personally flourish were those who gave their work everything they had.  They might not have liked what they did, but valued the value of their work.  And they invariably got excellent work reviews, because their focus was on doing the job to the best of their ability, not just on the paycheck.  They tended to be more perceptive of better ways to get the work done, more open to hearing & giving constructive, productive criticism.  

If my John, who is an artist, focused on how well people received his work, he'd pander to their tastes instead of painting what calls to HIM.  Not that there aren't times he has a commission that doesn't appeal all that much to him, but it's always clear when he's done a piece where HE didn't invest himself in the work.  Praise be, that doesn't happen these days, because he specializes in subjects - animals, trains, cozy homes - that speak to his heart.  But just because his most astonishing work - the K4 he painted for me, the magnificent Susquehanna Afternoon trainscape - hasn't sold doesn't mean painting it was a waste of time.  Far from it - the only thing he had a right to was the work he put into it.  Everything else is up to everyone else.  He did his bit.  Doing it to the the best of his ability was the reward (and pushed his "best" upward, to greater heights).



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Every day, I experience the reality that the only thing I have a right to is my own labor.  Looking around, I see such a need for our culture to straighten up & fly right when it comes to how we approach getting up there in years.  It is something that many people are concerned with, are affected by, but MY approach to sage-ing not age-ing (to quote Reb Zalman) tends to be under appreciated.  My approach goes to socialization, having FUN, rather than maintenance & daily task support, which is what so many people see as the greatest need.  While dressing & getting to meals & taking care of task-oriented support might be the most apparent, most urgent need, my deepest belief is that having fun, experiencing moments of joy every day, feeling ALIVE, is the most important of our needs, whatever our age.

Every day, I do everything I can to reach my goal of revolutionizing our present day culture's pathetic attitudes around "aging."  What a sorry mess it would be if I looked to how others respond to my efforts for what fuels my efforts.  That is the work itself.


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It might not seem like a lot to others, but every morning one of the very first things I do is to log onto Values.com & pick out a billboard & a values-related mini video to post on Facebook.  I've yet to have an FB friend like either, but that hasn't stopped me.  The task I gave myself was to post one of each every day for a month, or until either runs out.  And in doing the same action, every day, inspiration struck & I came up with a dandy game that people can play by as a form of Solitaire or with others, including family of all ages.  

I was lucky to have worked at Prudential Healthcare, to have experienced the sad state of people who felt rudderless without the work they'd barely tolerated because it was literally all they knew how to do, to see the faces & saging bodies of friends & colleagues suddenly facing not getting that validating paycheck, of losing the status of working for a major company that everyone recognized.  Because of that particular experience, it was easy to relate to the thought that the only thing I have a right to my own labor.

Unlike a shocking number of my PHC colleagues, where I worked, what I was paid, even what I did, didn't define me.  The only thing that I have a right to is my labor, the energies I bring to whatever task is at hand.  If  someone appreciates what I do - wonderful!  But I don't take their approval as validation of my efforts, any more than I would take disapproval as censuring my labor.  When I know that my best efforts have gone into something, than the response of others is moot.  

That might sound airy fairy, but I've tended to live that sort of existence.  Can recall someone lambasting me for not getting a real job with a steady paycheck & benefits.  "You owe it to John," was the argument.  Actually, I don't owe anything to John, nor does he to me.  We owe it to ourselves to develop as fully as we can.  That has been slammed as being too hippie-ish, as downright irresponsible, but am proof positive that it is - for us - the right way to live.  At 64 & 70, we are in separate yet touching lives that are flat-out fabulous.  

John is happily working away on his Pet-trait commissions, with the occasional train thrown in.  I am happy as a dicky bird with what I do, attending the weekly Current Events discussion at a local senior residence, basking in being The Cupcake Lady of the Bryn Athyn Bounty Farm Market (with many thanks to Be Well Bakery & Cafe!), attended several living expansively events in the winter & spring & looking forward to attending several later this month & in the fall.  

A lot of our friends & pleasant acquaintances worry that we seem to live without a net.  Yet, we feel that how well we do ties directly to if we give our all to all we choose to do.  Our reward is in our labor, which - it's now clear to me - is our only right. Until now, never thought of how differently I experience things when I put my full faith & energies into my labor rather than giving less, how differently I experience it all when my focus is on how others respond rather than in the level of my work.  

How lovely to discover that I've - we've - lived instinctively in compliance with the Bhagavad Gita; how delightful to embrace that the more connected involved invested I am in what I do, the more fully I am.  What an ab fab awakening!


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