How to Be Happy at Work?
If
you're unhappy at work--or anywhere else, for that matter--it's because you've
made yourself unhappy. There's an easy way to change that.
Let me
start off with a little story.
I once
knew a saleswoman–young, divorced–who got a diagnosis of breast cancer.
She had to work and raise two kids while fighting the cancer. Even so, she
managed to be happy at work, noticeably happier than her co-workers. In
fact, she not only won her battle with cancer but subsequently became one of
the top salespeople at Bristol Myers.
She was
not, as it happens, naturally cheerful. Quite the contrary. When
she started full-time work, she was frequently depressed. But she turned
it around, using the techniques I'm going to provide you in this column.
That
saleswoman once told me: When you're unhappy, it's because you've decided to be unhappy.
Maybe
it wasn't a conscious decision; maybe it crept up on you while you weren't
looking–but it was a decision nonetheless. And that's good news, because
you can decide instead to be happy. You just need to understand how and why you
make the decisions.
What Are Your Rules?
Happiness
and unhappiness (in work and in life) result entirely from the rules in your
head that you use to evaluate events. Those rules determine what's worth
focusing on, and how you react to what you focus on.
Many
people have rules that make it very difficult for them to happy and very easy
for them to be miserable.
I once
worked with a sales guy who was always angry at the people he worked with. The
moment anything didn't go the way he thought it should go, he'd be screaming in
somebody's face. He was making everyone around him miserable–but just as
importantly, he was making himself miserable, because just about anything set him off.
For
this guy, the everyday nonsense that goes on in every workplace was not just
important, but crazy-making important.
I once
asked him what made him happy. His answer: "The only thing that
makes this !$%$#! job worthwhile is when I win a $1 million
account." I asked him how often that happened. His response:
"About once a year."
In
other words, this guy had internal rules that guaranteed he'd be miserable on a
day-to-day basis, but only happy once a year.
One of
the other sales guys at that firm had the exact opposite set of rules.
His philosophy was "every day above ground is a good day." When
he encountered setbacks, he shrugged them off–because, according to his
internal rules, they just weren't that important. When I asked him what
made him miserable, his answer was: "Not much." When I pressed
him for a real answer, he said: "When somebody I love dies."
In
other words, the second sales guy had rules that made it easy for him to be
happy but difficult to be miserable.
I'd
like to be able to write that Mr. Positivity regularly outsold Mr. Negativity,
but in fact their sales results were similar. Even so, I think Mr.
Negativity was a loser, because he lived each day in a state of misery.
His colleague was always happy. He was winning at life. He was
happy at work.
Make Yourself Happier: 3 Steps
The
saleswoman who had breast cancer was happy, too, and this is the method she
used to make herself happy:
1. Document Your Current Rules
Set
aside a half-hour of alone time and, being as honest as you can, write down the
answers to these two questions:
- What has to happen for me to be happy?
- What has to happen for me to be unhappy?
Now
examine those rules. Have you made it easier to miserable than to be
happy? If so, your plan is probably working.
2. Create a Better Set of Rules
Using
your imagination, create and record a new set of rules that would make it easy
for you to be happy and difficult to be miserable. Examples:
- "I enjoy seeing the people I work with each day."
- "I really hate it when natural disasters destroy my home."
Don't
worry whether or not these new rules seem "realistic"–that's not the
point. All internal rules are arbitrary, anyway. Just write rules
that would make you happier if you really believed them.
3. Post the New Rules Where You'll See Them
When
you've completed your set of "new" rules, print out them out and post
copies in three places: your bathroom mirror, the dashboard of your car, and
the side of your computer screen. Leave them up, even after you've
memorized them.
Having
those new rules visible when you're doing other things gradually re-programs
your mind to believe the new rules. You will be happy at work. It's
really that simple.
Oh, and
by the way ... That saleswoman? She was my mother.
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