The Addictive Hum of the Teeming Sycophants

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“Do you miss working?”

It’s been four months since I sold my last business. During that time, my blood pressure has dropped from an average of 130/85 to 110/65. My weight has also dropped fifteen pounds -- with little change in eating or exercise. I have hope that I’ll soon fit into the dresses in storage bins marked an accusatory “too small.” As if it was somehow their fault that my waist had disappeared over the years, causing them to become too tight.

Alarmingly, I’m out of debt. In 1966, I learned about “credit.” I eventually ran up a monstrous $3 million of debt in the early 1990s.

It’s taken all of the last four months to absorb the simple fact that other than a collapse of the national economy I will easily have all the money needed to satisfy my needs. . .for the rest of my life.

I still maintain a “to do” list like I did every day in business. The difference being that almost nothing on the list is timely. For the last three decades, I had to prioritize which dumpster fires I would attempt to extinguish.

Yet, the simple truth is, “Yes, there are things about work I do miss.”

It’s not a lack of purpose in my life that leaves me feeling incomplete. “Purpose” would suggest a linear path in my business struggles. When you work with thousands of individuals and dozens of major corporations the watchword is “whimsy.” Whimsy easily trumps logic in the corporate world . . . and individuals can be quite imaginative in their mayhem. To be successful I had to be an artful dodger rather than an insistent locomotive. I'd lost true "purpose” years ago.

To fully appreciate what I miss about working, you need to accept the depths of my shallowness.

I lived in a world where the color of a piece of cloth draped around your neck signaled your resolve. Smiles were a tool used to disarm your opponent. Friendships were totally transactional. It was during the last third of my six-decade career that what I did was defined. I became known as a “disrupter” and then as an “influencer.”

As an “influencer” people eagerly sought my favor. I was wined and dined and showered with awards, free trips, watches, and cash prizes of as much as $25,000 – for simply doing my job.

But the “aphrodisiac constant” – the straw that stirred my influencer smoothie – was PRAISE.

The minute I accepted a Publishers’ Clearinghouse-sized check for my business, people quit telling me how wonderful I am.

One of my basic business tenets was to always motivate and never manipulate. To abide by my self-imposed rule, I judged my actions against a high standard of truthiness. If a person is willing to lie, they’re probably very willing to manipulate you.

I had suspected that the highly favorable opinions expressed during business meetings over English muffins and orange juice weren’t unadulterated. However, I was totally unprepared for the ego-massage to end.

My weeks usually involved seven to ten meetings during which two to five people would vie to stroke my vanity. Those engaged in this corporate fellatio often had C-level titles. Whatever their corporate roles the false platitudes rolled off their lips, “Kudos…kudos…kudos!”

It was all a façade.

The sooner I accept that and “move on” – the less I will miss it.

My dog thinks I’m fantastic, which will have to be enough.

Jill

Comments

Easily remedied

If you want Kudos, just post a story here ;)

Appreciation (preferably honest) is a quite underestimated driving force. I have worked at places where that has been lacking (though not for long). In one case there was a change in a negative way when the CEO changed. Interestingly enough everyone suddenly started to complain about their (admittedly low) salaries.

When I changed jobs I got a >50% raise but more importantly, I felt valued.

PS
The praise you received wasn't necessarily insincere. However, people forget soon (that's great but what have you done lately?). Also, human beings are lazy and very seldom make an effort to search out a person to praise long after the fact.

Positive Reinforcement

As I've written in several of my stories, I'm a big follower of B. F. Skinner. I practiced positive reinforcement in my work, coaching, and parenting. I believe it worked in most situations, although to a lesser extent in the office.

I often preached to my employees that salary and benefits (which I tried to keep at the top of the market) were just two components of their overall compensation package.

Was their professional reputations being enhanced?

Were they learning new marketable skills?

Were they achieving personal satisfaction?

Did they enjoy the work environment and feel safe?

Most of the younger employees seemed to think I was blowing smoke. The older ones at least nodded.

I'm sure some of the praise was sincere. However, most was lip-service and temporal.

Jill

Angela Rasch (Jill M I)

Everyone needs a little pat

leeanna19's picture

Everyone needs a little pat on the back sometimes. I have worked for companies that liked to get rid of staff. A pat on the back made you feel more secure.

Where I work now I have 4 people report to me. I make sure to compliment them all a few times a week. Our MD is female, so the company does not have the "toxic masculinity" of some of the palces I have worked. (I can't believe I just wrote that!) I have worked for agressive men, who did not listen to anyone, who surround themselves with yes men. That is not to say some women don't do the same.

One of the things about retirement, is you can lose a sense of purpose.

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Leeanna

A point to note

I cannot advise you concerning sycophancy - I can barely spell it.

However, if you are thinking of retiring I can offer a few words of caution.

For a couple of years after I was forced to stop work my brain still thought that I was on that hamster wheel. It takes a while to adjust. Eventually one learns to relax and think of other things. In my case, I had time to investigate my own condition and discovered, to my amazement, that TG fiction was a thing. I had no idea it existed before. Why would I?

Once you relax you find, after a short while, that you haven't any time. How on Earth do people keep one or more jobs, raise a family, look after a house and do sports as well? How is it that with no job, children gone and house fine I have no time left at all? If you are one of those people, as seems likely, that did all manner of activities before and still do most of them after, then you may not get caught in this trap.

Time speeds up as you grow older. My theory is that subjective time is proportional to one's age: when you are four then a year is a heck of a long time to wait for Christmas but when you are seventy then, God, is it August already? Each day seems just as long as they always did but the weeks seem to fly by.

I'm not going to say "Hope this helps" because it probably will not. But just be aware of how things can look different once you are a lady of leisure.

Penny

Praise with nothing asked in return.

You ARE fantastic, hon. Always have been, always will be.

If they were giving you false praise, it was only because the world they were working with you in wasn't yours. It was theirs, so they were praising you for the role you filled in that world, which is kinda like praising water for being wet when you're thirsty.

You're a great listener. You're a supporter of younger talent. You're a wonderful friend. You help to make others' dreams come true.These are all praises that I can give you that have nothing to do with a job, or fulfilling a role for someone else, but because of who you are as a person.

The highest praise I can give anyone is to call them a Good Person, and I readily bestow that title on you, for what it may be worth.

*hugs*

Melanie E.

Awwwwwww

eom

Angela Rasch (Jill M I)

I agree, Jill has helped me

leeanna19's picture

I agree, Jill has helped me recently with advice on how to improve my writing.

Thank you Jill x

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Leeanna

Not Only Your Dog

joannebarbarella's picture

Many here think you're fantastic!

I've now been retired for eight years and very occasionally I get approached to take on a project that needs "fixing", which was basically what I did before. I have always declined. It's time to let somebody younger worry their guts out and have sleepless nights while they wrestle with the current problem while I can luxuriate in getting up at a time of my own choosing, have a leisurely breakfast and watch the rush-hour traffic inch its way towards the city while I relax.

Of course one of the main ingredients to my serenity is that I don't really need the money. I have to be a little careful but I'm not on the breadline, although Covid tried its best to wipe me out financially. However, my sources of income are diversified enough that I survived.

What gives me satisfaction now is that I have more time to see my family, I can read my newspapers end-to-end, I can beat the puzzles most days and only get mildly annoyed on the days when I don't. I can spend time checking the state of my investments and I can go to the pub and gossip with my remaining old mates (who are unfortunately getting fewer as the years roll by). I also have time to sit at a keyboard and compose useless notes like this one to someone who definitely doesn't need my advice.

I guess all I am saying is that the things that give you satisfaction change when you step away from the daily grind. Just enjoy yourself Jill!

Your Support...

...has helped writers here for years.

Thanks.

Jill

Angela Rasch (Jill M I)

How about

a little mentoring to satisfy your craving?
There must be a host of SME's in your area that would love some gentle advice on how to -
- keep their business afloat in a recession
- not get sucked dry by the banks (aka credit debt)
- etc.

One or two days a week would keep the noggin active would it not?

Anyway, just a thought (to quote one of my favourite YouTube channels)

I retired in Sept 2016. I was done and mentally burnt out. Since my last day at work, I have never thought about going back to any form of paid employment. I did have some offers but 'Nah, been there didn't get the t-shirt' and they have all been rejected.
I'm simply too busy with my life. (glances at the huge pile of ironing that isn't going to go away and moves on to something else).

Samantha

You write such interesting blogs.

Angharad's picture

As for retirement, it's your time to do the things you always wanted but work got in the way. All I can say is enjoy it because when it ends you won't be there. I've been living the dream for nearly forty years, during that time I have worked hard. I set about doing the things I wanted to then I had a stroke. I learned that particular fprm kills 95%, I survived it and during my recovery, I could still do most of the things I did before, only slower and I get tired. It taught me we are never in control and mortality gets closer. Enjoy what you can while you can, it doesn
t last forever.

Angharad