The secret of feeling motivated at work
The first working day of the week is always dreaded. The last day of the week is when people are already discussing their plans for the weekend with their colleagues at work. These discussions inevitably get competitive. “My weekend will be better than yours” is the general theme. Then the weekend comes and goes. On Monday morning, it is time to face the Inquisition in the office.
You’ve got to serve someone
We all value being able to work by ourselves. I get that. To be able to make decisions about our work sounds empowering. We like to choose, when we will work and how we will work. The feeling of being in charge is inherently appealing. But can we? The idea of having a boss who will look over our shoulder is disgusting. Real autonomy is an illusion. Bob Dylan said it long back, “You’ve got to serve someone.” Even the CEO is answerable to the Board and the Board has to explain stuff to the shareholders. You might say that you are like me, an entrepreneur. You are accountable to your customer or client. Even an actor or artist has a million bosses in the audience who will feel judgment on their work. If you have a boss who loves to micro-manage, you can bid goodbye to autonomy. There goes one third of your motivation to show up on Monday morning.
Making the world a better place … yeah, right!
Mastery – the path to happiness
Let’s play a mind game. If your job involved making coffee, there will quickly come a time when you will be able to switch off your brain and deliver the coffee on auto-pilot. That is when you will start looking for autonomy and purpose to come to your rescue and they won’t.What if you tried your hand at Mastery? What if you built in a way to step up your expertise by creating your own version of coffee-art. When you serve the coffee to a couple sitting at the café, you could add a little coffee-art by painting a heart on the coffee. How about designing your own version of a birthday card on the coffee?Imagine having your own range of coffee-art that changes daily, much like Google-Art. Imagine being able to write your customer’s initials on the coffee. Or a cartoon character. The list is endless. Any job will have endless opportunities for building mastery. It may not have autonomy or purpose; it will have mastery as a possibility.Mastery is an endless pathway that you can use to stay motivated regardless of the work you do. You could build further expertise by learning about different recipes of coffee. Or about the rituals around coffee in different parts of the world. And become a storyteller who tells a new story involving coffee to a customer. Maybe you could have storytelling sessions about all the interesting people who love coffee. The day you can discover that the opportunities for mastery in your field, whatever that might be, is really endless, you will stop dreading the beginning of the work week.The day you discover the endless possibilities of building your expertise, you will be truly autonomous and you would have discovered the purpose behind your work. Experts find purpose because they love what they do. That is infinitely easier than doing what you love. Mr Pink, maybe there is only meta motivation for us to work – being the master of the craft.Do you believe that while autonomy is elusive and very often there are jobs where purpose is hard to find. Being the master of your craft is the one option available to everyone to stay happy and motivated at work. Let me know your reason to agree or disagree. Thanks for leaving your comments.======A modified version of this appeared in YourStory.comRead this: Who is responsible for your happiness at work?Feel free to use the cartoon in your presentation <click here>