A while ago, I posted about the Art of Underachievement, where I introduced a character called Mr Motivation, a conglomeration of a few people I have met in many years of suffering the ups and downs of corporate life in the seemingly inexorable rat race.
Mr Motivation is an arrogant man (or woman) who is so driven by the lust for money, achievement, material goods and power that he sacrifices everything, including his soul, and thinks that every other person should do the same. To him, I am an underperforming imbecile who simply must be unhappy, bored and depressed in my pointless dreary underachieving life even though I have found a niche in my career that I am relatively happy with. In other words I have found, for me, an almost perfect balance between work and life with benefits that make me comfortable and happy.
Mr Motivation considers me to be a loser and himself a winner.
And now Mr Motivation has struck again – and he has made me annoyed.
I have a thick skin and can deal with people like this. I give as good as I get and remain totally and utterly unimpressed with their so-called achievements. I don’t care whether they have a huge house and top of the range cars. The fact that their salary is bigger than mine is irrelevant.
In short, the only person who cares about Mr Motivation and his life is Mr Motivation.
However, this time he has gone too far and raised doubts in the mind of Mrs PM.
Mrs PM and I both do a similar kind of job (it’s how we met). We are both good at our jobs and Mrs PM is particularly happy in her chosen career – certainly happier than I am in mine. She is at a level where she can cope with the demands of the job and takes pleasure in her achievements.
She is not a high flyer who wants to dominate her chosen career, working relentlessly to climb up the ladder, achieve goal after goal, winning the rat race as a high flying manager in charge of hundreds of people; she just wants contentment and enough to be comfortable – just like me.
Last year, Mrs PM went to a university reunion and ended up in conversation with an acolyte of Mr Motivation. He simply said to her:
“What happened?”
In other words, why are you stuck in a rut with no ambition to better yourself?
In other words, she was subjected to a typical quotation from the bible of Mr Motivation.
I have had discussions with people like this before; Mrs PM rarely considers this and these ill-chosen words pushed several buttons - mostly the button labelled SELF DOUBT.
Mrs PM is a very clever woman – far more intelligent than I am. She excelled at university and so far had been successful at whatever she has turned her hand to in her career.
Mr Motivation’s acolyte is a typical example of the kind of person who thinks:
“If you’re not earning megabucks or haven’t climbed high up on the corporate ladder then you are an abject failure. If you don’t work really hard to achieve world domination then you may as well be an amoeba.”
Mrs PM opened her heart to me and we had a chat about it. I had to stop myself from saying:
“He’s a complete arsehole”
I didn’t want to make her think that she really is a failure. She isn’t. She is far from it.
I just tried to give her some perspective.
First of all, Mrs PM earns a pretty good salary. Like me, the demands on her time can be quite high at times but mostly her position gives her an opportunity to balance life and work evenly. Her work, while it can sometimes be demanding does not take over her life.
Furthermore, unlike the motivational acolyte, she is in a happy relationship and has enough time to pursue other goals in life. I tried to emphasise the differences between the motivational acolyte and herself and made her realise that she is fact happier than he is.
I’ve met this guy before and I will again. And when I do, I will have a chat with him. I will point out to him that while money and career power are the most important driving for motivational acolytes, not everybody wants to reach the top of the tree. Some of us are happy where we are. I’ve had this conversation many times before.
I have to tell you the story of one person in particular I used to work with. I’ll call him Dirk (not his real name).
I met Dirk at a company social event. At the time I didn’t work with him but we actually got on well enough to become friends. A year later, fate intervened and we ended up in the same department and as I started working with him, I realised that he was a highly intelligent guy – but also very ambitious.
At first, it wasn’t too bad. However, his desire to climb the corporate ladder soon began to take over. He was more driven by promotions than his enjoyment of the job. And it worked. He was promoted.
Before I go on, let me just reinforce the fact that I don’t mind ambitious people. There are people I work with who have climbed up and up yet remained friendly decent people who I am proud to call friends and still get on really well with.
Dirk was different. Dirk relished his responsibility and began to work longer and longer hours, pushing his team to do the same, unnecessarily so in my opinion. As he climbed, he changed. He started looking down on people like me and often came out with quips, in meetings, like:
“This is exactly why you won’t be a manager, Dave.”
However, it was soon evident that his ambition did not match his ability. He was a classic example of the Peter Principle – a person who is promoted beyond his level of competence.
He had no clue how to manage people.
And it got worse. He rose to be a pretty powerful manager – but not a good manager.
One Christmas, on my last day of the year, we were all out on the annual pub crawl. He marched up to me and said in front of others, “I was so close to cancelling your holiday and sending you to Singapore.”
“Merry pharking Christmas, Dirk,” I said before walking away.
In the end, he was found out. Redundancy struck and he ended up on the list.
A couple of years later, he reappeared at the company as a mere project manager – a significant step down. Sadly for him, the Peter Principle still applied – he ended up being made redundant a second time.
I haven’t seen him since.
One thing I know is that I feel sorry for Dirk. I would still buy him a beer but I would chat to him about how his career fluctuated and failed. I would ask him whether he should have stayed at the level he was good at. I think I might still be working with him today if he had.
Yet somehow I imagine he will still be clinging onto the dream of ruling the world and working his fingers to the bone to do so – while looking at people like me and calling me a failure.
Thankfully, Mrs PM is happier now, content in the knowledge that she is brilliant at a job she really loves.
That, to me, is an achievement. I'm proud of her.
"the art of underachievement" - that's my specialty.
ReplyDeleteI could do better and often do.
I could rise higher, but I don't want to.
I'm happy at my level.
And once again the visual verification code hasn't appeared.
I love that you are a softy. You know doubt told Mrs PM that you are proud of her - which is so much more rewarding that a huge salary or a job title which involves grinding other people down.
ReplyDeleteI think you and I should get together and have a beer over work stories - I have a doozy I'm about to tell.
ReplyDeleteKnowing that your content - brilliant - can you and should you strive for more?
Great post
Hi River,
ReplyDeleteDo whatever makes you happy, I say. If you are happy wanting to rule the world then do it - just don't preach to me about it.
:-)
Cheers
PM
Hi EC,
ReplyDeleteI am a big softy (not such a softy that I will sit and watch romcoms).
I have indeed told her I'm proud of her.
:-)
Cheers
PM
Hi Pand,
ReplyDeleteI have many more work stories and that sounds like a great idea (next time either of us travels to the other side of the world :-))
As for my content - I could strive for more and I might do that. But I won't preach about it.
:-)
Cheers
PM
Mr Motivation is annoying.
ReplyDeleteHe may preach about it,
(i)to put the other person down (eg Dirk) due to his own insecurity or (ii) sincerely think that a person should realize his potential and believes that the 'preachee' has yet to fulfill his potential (eg me).
I was brought up this way, achieved high position without sacrificing work/life balance. Thus, I believe that it i s possible for everyone to have the cake and eat it too.
I don't preach it to all people as not everyone is born equal.
My mortal enemy will be Mr Complacent who brought the productivity of the whole team down. Just this evening, my other half was totally disgusted by a Mr Complacent in his team.
Mr Motivation,
ReplyDeleteThanks for the comment.
There is a difference between somebody who encourages a person with potential and somebody who puts you down because he has achieved so much and, according to him, you have achieved so little.
Now I have been in a position where I have actively encouraged people to go for something because I think they are capable of achieving that. At no point did I say "you are stuck in a rut; you are a failure; I am better than you".
And that's the difference. Mr Motivation says "Look at me! I'm great! I have done this! I have done that! Why haven't you? You're a failure. You are an underachiever."
Mr Complacent exists. I could write a blog post or ten about him too. The good thing is that Mr Complacent is usually found out a lot easier than a Mr Motivation who is a prime example of the Peter Principle.
Mr Motivation is a person who basically says "Look at my wealth! Look at my wad of cash! I'm the best of the best!"
Nobody cares about Mr Motivation.
In fact you may have inspired me. I may just introduce Mr Complacent to the blog because he definitely exists and can suck the very life out of a productive environment.
Watch this space.
:-)
Cheers
PM
Have you noticed that people like that are always "in" sales or "in' whatever it is they do. They talk corporate nonsense.
ReplyDeleteThey are rarely if ever creative, they never make anything, all they do is push buttons, and other people do all the real work.
They are just lying chancers most of the time. Totally sad selfish scumbags.
A job is a job, not a way of life. It is the means to an end, not the end itself.
Hi Jeremy,
ReplyDeleteYou're right. I;m quite happy for people to love their job and strive to do well in their chosen career but in reality most of them are after as much money as the can get and have egos the size of entire galaxies.
Just watch the Apprentice - it is full of them.
:-)
Cheers
PM