Tuesday, 29 July 2014

BALANCING GOALS AND ROLES WITHOUT HOLE | ‘Kayode Oyero


“…Life is an indivisible whole not fragmented parts. And any attempt to endanger marital role at the expense of career goals (and vice-versa) inevitably creates a hole of pain, emotional anguish, inner discomfort and general dissatisfaction. People who fail to strike inertia balance between their goals and roles pay costly balance later on. Success in an area of life is not a justification for failure or mediocrity in other areas…”

The more we grow, the more activity-based we become, the more the challenges of coping with living, the more fixed we become, the more our imperatives, our priorities, our yearnings and of course, our responsibilities!

Twenty-four hours a day become barely enough for us to sufficiently attend to all that we must touch - all that are important to us. Unfortunately, we are willing to contribute so many things, yet we lack the effective time management to distribute them evenly. Consequently, we hopelessly desire additional hours each day, thinking in our wildest imagination of such possibility rare as hen’s teeth when we know cocksure that the programmer of life and time will not shift its ground. We are quick to forget that the day is the smallest complete natural unit of time.

“The problem is time” we lamentably throw out as excuse for any who cares to listen to why we left some obligations unattended to or abandoned. We tell our spouse, “Honey, you just have to understand the nature of my job; it does not give room for me to take you out as such. I hope you understand?”, “Mum, marriage is not on my list now. Don’t you think I need to be a manager before that?” we ask rhetorically begging for an agreeable and soliticious up-down nod from them.

We starve our partner of conjugal rights such as intimacy, attention and emotional bonding. We deprive them of their inalienable right all because of career, ambition and official undertakings. Today, we are part of the entourage on a business tour. Tomorrow, we are heading a strategic marketing committee just inaugurated by the management of our company aimed at boosting sales and expanding niche. Next tomorrow, we are in the classroom, sitting attentively before a Don, taking one post-graduate lecture after the other. And in the evening after classes, we are at workers’ meeting in church or at the mosque, trying hard not to forsake the gathering of the brethren and on the day after, we wake up very early, dash to the bathroom for a brief shower and off we are to religious centers, to praise The Creator, to give him both dance and cash offerings in order to maintain spiritual standing with him.

But quite sadly, we prioritize our schedules and fail to schedule our priorities. We spend little or no time at home or outdoor in recreational atmosphere with our family. “They understand” we tell ourselves consolingly anytime our conscience snaps, for the greatest battle we fight are in the silent chambers of our own soul. We continue in this workaholic cycle trifling and neglecting our primary roles as father, mother, spouse and even our secondary role as son, daughter, brother and sister until nature knocks us down on compulsory bed rest.

Dear friend, there is nothing absolutely wrong with being diligent at work or aspiring the upper part of the corporate ladder, bagging higher certifications, sweating it out to realize our vision being the best manifestation of creative imagination and the primary motivation behind human action and being fervently involved in religious matters. But, sometimes, we may be saving minutes and wasting years once these commitments are not well-balanced with the family front, the emotionally part of life – the right to love and be loved. Thus, life becomes barely meaningful and enjoyable. Indeed, all is well that ends well. A chair of three legs but with one stunted offshoot definitely wobbles.

I can’t agree less with Stephen Covey, author of First Things First when he noted that “much of our pain in life comes from the sense that we’re succeeding in one role at the expense of another, possibly more important roles. We may be doing great as Chief Executive Officer of the company, but not doing well as parents or spouse. We may be succeeding in meeting the needs of our clients, but failing to meet our own need for personal development and spiritual growth.”

While roles represent the need for healthy family relationship and domestic, social and religious responsibilities cum areas of contribution, goals represent ambition and career building and a deep desire to create value and positively affect humanity, for this is the most valuable prosperity anyone can leave for posterity.

Incidentally, roles and goals form the major component of man’s life, hence their interconnectedness and indivisibility. Take for instance, just as the news of a promotion at work is shared with glee with family members and loved ones, so also does a fresh divorce (out of improper attention paid to marital responsibility) not only reduce the concentration and output level of a staffer, but can also be demoralizing and psychologically depressing. Notably, goals and roles are eternally trapped in an inseparable web and any attempt to wean one invariably jeopardizes the other unless when balanced.

Frankly speaking dear friend, life is an indivisible whole not fragmented parts. And any attempt to endanger marital role at the expense of career goals (and vice-versa) inevitably creates a hole of pain, emotional anguish, inner discomfort and general dissatisfaction. People who fail to strike inertia balance between their goals and roles pay costly balance later on. Success in an area of life is not a justification for failure in other crucial areas. True success is all-encompassing. It is all-round turn-around. It is one that brings about gratifying feeling of pleasant fulfillment in all areas of one’s life. A balanced life is one at equilibrium not one in the posture of a see-saw; where one end is blossoming flourishingly and the other end is at the disadvantaged base.

When an individual’s life is at seesaw, struggle, difficulty and unrewarding labour become the order of the day. Why? Because accomplishing one goal inadvertently impact others in a cruelly negative manner due to lack of balance. When the family is not suffering temporary but consequential abandonment, official duties or religious obligations pay the price. Truly, most of our frustration comes from unmet expectation!
Now, Dear friend, permit me to share with you Four Approaches to a Balanced Life

Number One: SYNCHRONIZATION

By synchronization, you multitasks goals and roles. You juxtapose: attend to your responsibilities and ambition same time. For instance, communicating with your spouse and kids during lunch break at work. 

“Hi! Was just thinking about you.”; “Hope you are enjoying classes.”; “Hope Juli isn’t giving you much of a stress” are short utterances that go a long way in bringing a family closer every day.

I particularly think the cliché: “Out of sight isn’t out of mind” has outlived its relevance. Out of sight must not just stay in the mind. It must be articulated in constant communication. Communication which is a display of care and concern tremendously helps grow affection. Everyone likes to be someone else’s priority. Remember, to communicate is to commune. What is cultivated develops and that left un-prune deteriorates. Pick up that phone now, run to the convenience of your organization and call them. Try it! Sweet distraction! Never neglect parental responsibility and your role as a father or as a mother.

Number two: HARMONIZATION

Harmonize compatible goals and roles. For instance, a man who is a father, husband and a clergy can marry his responsibility has a father and a husband together by spending wonderful moment in the car with his wife and kids on the way to church if his week has been whole of a hectic 4a.m to 11p.m.

Likewise, there is nothing wrong with a man who is a postgraduate student, employee, father, sport enthusiast and husband to take ‘Junior’ to class or the gym with him on Saturday if that will kindle the fire of father-to-son love and vice-versa. Try it. It’s fun! Papa and son in class! Papa and son working at keeping body fit at the gymnasium. Remember, a day still has twenty-four hours, therefore the need for prudent time management.

Number three: ensure INCLUSION

By inclusion, we create involvement and participation of roles and goals. We sensitize, prod and persuade our friends, business associates, academic pals, family members, spouse, religious affiliates and any and every other person in our circle of influence to embrace our goals, vision and ambition. Be open about your aim and target; do not leave them in the dark about what you intend to slingshot. That way, you all will be busy together working at achieving something worthwhile. Your wife or husband won’t complain of less attention. They understand and share your purpose.

Here’s an example: An individual with a contribution-driven purpose for charity and social welfare can persuasively recruit everyone whom he owes one responsibility or the other into strategic positions of his or her Non-governmental organization. There is a sense of bonding that comes from sharing common goal.

However, some goals and roles can be so selfish that they require exclusive SEPARATION

Essentially, time-sensitive roles and goals like corporate appointments and marital obligation in the area of exchange of marital vow and conjugation and few others may demand exclusive attention and focus in order for one not to wastes years all in a bid of trying to wisely utilize minutes. Too much haste often results in waste. However, Initiative is the key here.

May I drop this on you dear friend: The way we see the problem is the problem. When we change the way we see, what we see automatically changes. Perception is possession. It is possible to balance goals and roles without hole. All-round success is not a mirage; it is possible and achievable no matter how busy we are or how tight our schedule. So therefore, you have no excuse to remain a bachelor or a bachelorette all under the guise of career pursuit. Accomplishing one goal must not jeopardize others. Remember, everything can be taken away from a man but one thing: the last of the human freedom – to choose one’s attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one’s way, how we respond.

“Vibrant health, economic security, rich and satisfying relationships, ongoing personal and professional development, and a deep sense of purpose, contribution and personal congruence create quality of life” says Roger and Rebecca Merrill.

Dear friend, no man is a know-it-all. You can add to the four approaches. I’ll be glad to have your views. My Twitter handle is @Imodoye_1. A balanced life is possible. Enjoy your day!

…Kip da Optimism Alive!

Picture credit: Google

© ‘Kayode Oyero, 2014
All Rights Reserved.

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