Bodies: Also
- Readers Respond
- Share
Readers Respond
The Fall 2022 issue explored a space where many of us spend most of our waking hours: work. The coronavirus pandemic prompted many workers鈥攁nd businesses鈥攖o reassess their relationship to work, taking a good, hard look at the way we鈥檝e done things in the past and, hopefully, finding ways we might do better in the future.
Our issue tackled major challenges and emerging solutions to making work work better for more people, up to and including the abolition of work. While abolishing work altogether might be a long way off, shifting the culture toward a more humane understanding of labor requires our collective imagination. In that spirit of generative dreaming, we asked 大象传媒 readers online to their ideas for an ideal work-life balance鈥攁nd were impressed by these thoughtful responses:
For me, the word 鈥渂alance鈥 doesn鈥檛 quite fit in the discussion of work and life. To me, balance implies the scales being at rest, a certain equality between two things. But in reality, I think the scales should be heavily weighted toward whatever gives each person satisfaction and peace, and maybe even joy. If we鈥檙e imagining, then I鈥檇 like to aim for the sky. For me, that means paid employment that is really part of my life, instead of a contest between the two, or paid employment that meets my material needs but easily takes a back seat to the rest of my life, where my real work鈥攃reating a kinder, more compassionate world鈥攖akes place. I鈥檓 not seeking balance, I鈥檓 seeking supremacy for what truly matters and gives meaning. 鈥Lindsey Britt, Brattleboro, Vermont
Forty hours that include commute time. Hybrid working environments, summer slowdowns across as many industries [and] professions [as possible]. 鈥Nikki McIntosh, Martinez, California
I don鈥檛 know about anyone else, but I don鈥檛 dream of labor. I want work that doesn鈥檛 feel like work, and I want it to be part of my life, not separate. I want to bring my gifts forward and share them when I am doing my work. Not that that won鈥檛 be challenging at times, but it鈥檚 hard to feel a sense of well-being when the systems tangle up my energy away from where and with whom it would most serve. To put simply: at least a cultural shift to four-day workweeks. Pay for quality > quantity of work. Better paid parental leave. Universal menstrual leave. To name a few. 鈥Kyle Rhodes, Bend, Oregon