Wednesday, November 20, 2019
Why you should bring your true, messy self to work everyday
Why you should bring your true, messy self to work everyday Why you should bring your true, messy self to work everyday For decades, a buttoned-up, reserved âwork faceâ was the professional norm. You didnât talk about your life outside work, and as far as your boss was concerned, you didnât have one.Jerry Colonna, the cofounder and CEO of Reboot, an executive coaching and leadership development firm, recently summarized it on the On Being podcast as a mindset of, âYou leave the personal at the doorâ - you donât bring it into the workplace. That got promulgated across multiple generations with people saying, âWell, donât bring your feelings into work.âRecently, that way of working fell out of fashion, with the âwhole selfâ movement â" the idea of bringing your entire (sometimes messy, sometimes overbearing) self to work every day. Being yourself at work, Colonna said, âItâs that we create an environment in which people have the freedom and the invitation to be fully themselves and to actually find the experience of being at work a means to becoming a more full human bein g and an adult - the art of growing up.âFollow Ladders on Flipboard!Follow Laddersâ magazines on Flipboard covering Happiness, Productivity, Job Satisfaction, Neuroscience, and more!Being your authentic self at work was the subject of a recent study from several universities â" Rice, Xavier, Texas AM, the University of Memphis, Portland State University, and the University of California, Berkeley.The results? Bringing your entire self to work is healthier and more productive.After analyzing 65 previous studies on the results of employees revealing an oft-stigmatized trait, such as sexual orientation, mental illness, or pregnancy, researchers said their findings overwhelmingly indicate that those who are open regarding these non-visible traits are more productive at work and happier in life.Unfortunately, the same doesnât hold with more visible traits such as gender, race, or physical disabilities, researchers found.âIdentities that are immediately observable operate differ ently than those that are concealable,â said Eden King, a co-author of the study and an associate professor of psychology at Rice, in a release. âThe same kinds of difficult decisions about whether or not to disclose the identity â" not to mention the questions of to whom, how, when, and where to disclose the identities â" are probably less central to their psychological experiences.âStill, according to this study, youâll probably find that people at work appreciate gaining new information about you â" and may tell you something about themselves in return.
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