Do you love your work?
In some circles, this is the expectation — that you should love your work and if you don’t, there is something wrong (with you or your job). But I’m here to proclaim: If you don’t love your work, relax. You are normal.
This is true for the present developed world (less than 50 percent of employees in the U.S. report enjoying their jobs) but also for the vast majority of the workers across the world today (over 1 billion people earn $1.25/day, or less), and especially when you consider the human experience over history where the vast majority have worked and lived in “survival mode.”)
It is a privilege and a blessing to enjoy your work.
Need some data to support this in addition to your own personal experience?
[AN ASIDE: Don’t confuse “loving your job” (job satisfaction) with employee engagement. Engagement (which has many positive benefits) is a result of a combination of factors including involvement in decision-making, having your input considered, opportunity for job development, and feeling your supervisors are concerned about your well-being.]
Add to this your own reality checkpoint: Out of all the places and the years you have worked, how many of them and for how long did you truly, completely love what you were doing?
We must always remind ourselves that the first and primary purpose of work is to provide for our (and our family’s) needs —food, shelter, clothing. You have to live to enjoy life, and meeting one’s physical needs precedes being emotionally and physically content.
Additionally, work, by definition, is providing goods and services that people need or want and are willing to pay for. By its very nature, work requires activity and effort that someone else wants you to do, and to do it in the way they want.
When I coach individuals regarding career direction, we start with what is needed (or wanted), not with what they want to do. Virtually everyone, when starting his or her work career, starts by doing work that is needed and usually has some unpleasant component to it.
If you are not loving your job, relax. Take stock of the aspects of your work (and your life as a whole) that you do like and be thankful for those.
Learn what makes a task fulfilling or enjoyable for you and pursue opportunities to make these more frequent for you. (Yes, it will take initiative and effort.)
Remember — you are not fully in control of your life, the world, and what happens to you. But, you are in control of growing and being thankful and content for what is going on in your life right now. Pursue this.
By the way, do something fun with someone you love for Valentine’s Day. Don’t look to your work for love in your life!