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Many people confuse hard-working
people with workaholics. What is workaholism?
Workaholism is more than a
dedication to your job. It’s a near-obsessive commitment that supersedes most,
if not all, other aspects of life. For many, workaholism is a true addiction, inextricably
tied to feelings of self worth and identity.
What are some characteristics of
workaholics? How could a person tell that he/she is a workaholic?
A workaholic displays
symptoms similar to any other addict. He/ she works long hours, at
the expense of personal relationships and health. When not working,
they’re thinking about work. Work dictates their mood: when work is
going well, they’re up; when work is going less well, they’re down.
Workaholics often go months without seeing friends; put their marriages on
cruise control; defend their choice to work as hard as they do (come
up with justification after justification); and may use work as a
distraction from other problems or aspects of life.
What are some reasons that workaholics work so hard?
What are some reasons that workaholics work so hard?
Working, or simply being
busy, can be a hard habit to break. Busy people are important people.
They’re also often pleasantly distracted people. In an op-ed that
went viral in the New York Times a few years ago, a cartoonist named
Tim Kreider wrote that “Busyness serves as a kind of existential
reassurance, a hedge against emptiness.” When workaholics aren’t busy
working—or doing something to promote their work—they feel anxious and guilty. For both men and women,
this is often a result of recession—they hang onto jobs for dear life and
do everything they can to ensure they’re indispensable. For women in
particular, workaholism may stem from the lingering notion that great
opportunities for women are still rarer than they are for men, and as such
must be strived for with unflagging determination and drive. What’s
more, today’s female employees are among the first generation to have been
raised by mothers who, as a whole, placed importance not just on a job,
but a career. For many of these
women, the slide into workaholism seems almost predisposed.

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There is. Just because work
itself is a respectable pursuit doesn’t mean that an addiction to it is
any less damaging than other sorts of addictions. A number of
studies show that workaholism has been associated with a wide range of
health problems, such as insomnia, anxiety,
and heart disease.
Besides from health problems,
does being a workaholic bring negative effects?
Yes. For some people,
working serves as a Band-Aid for other issues, a way to numb undesirable
feelings or fill certain voids, much in the way that alcohol might do for
an alcoholic or sex for a sex
addict. What’s more, working too much can lead to lower job
satisfaction, as found in a 2008 study published in The Psychologist
Manager Journal that compared overworking employees to
those who maintained a better work-life balance. Also, the ill
effects are contagious: A study published in the International
Journal of Stress Management found
that workaholics can even make their co-workers stressed.
What about the effects to the families?
What about the effects to the families?
A 2001 study published in
the American Journal of Family Therapy found that
working too much negatively impacted an employee’s marriage. This isn’t surprising,
since if you’re married to your work it can be difficult to be
married to anything, or anyone, else. There have also been studies looking
at the impact of workaholic parents on their children
and the news isn’t good. In one study, adult children of
workaholic fathers experienced more depression and anxiety and a weaker
sense of self. That study appeared in the American Journal of Family
Therapy.
What about the positive side?
What about the positive side?
There are many positive aspects
to working hard and to an increasing commitment to career. These days,
more and more people, women especially, are embarking on, and staying
with, careers that are personally fulfilling, identity making, and
lucrative. Hard work can reap great rewards. For many, it’s how they
develop feelings of self worth and confidence and purpose. This can
be empowering.
Since many workaholics often deny having a problem, what are solutions for them?
Since many workaholics often deny having a problem, what are solutions for them?

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It’s difficult to convince
a workaholic to change their behavior if they’re not also willing. If you
have a workaholic in your life you might point out the things he or she is
missing out on while at work, whether it’s a child’s soccer game, a
good book, or a yoga class. Seek to understand why the person feels the
need to work so much and support them in finding a resolution. Perhaps
they feel pressure to earn money, or they feel insecure about their
performance. Work together to find ways to handle the dilemma beyond
longer hours at the office. For people who wonder if they might be workaholics,
I might suggest they resolve to check in every so often and
ask themselves: Am I working too hard? And if so, why? What
am I getting out of 60 hours that I couldn’t get out of 40? Or 35? Many
who work hard are working for reasons beyond the benefits good work
provides but it requires really stopping and evaluating the situation to
recognize that.
Can the symptoms get better?
They can, but it almost
always requires a total overhaul in perspective. The first step
is acknowledging and accepting—really accepting—that work isn’t the most
important thing in your life. Decide what is. You won’t be able to
say “no” to work unless you are saying “yes” to something else. The second
step is actually starting to say no—to working late, to extra assignments,
to doing a little more ‘for the team.’ Finish one task
before taking on another. Third, be firm and vigilant about the time you
spend working. Decide in advance that you will work, say, 8 a.m. to 4
p.m., or no more than 40 hours a week. Often, you will find that
limiting the time you have to spend on work will make you more efficient
during those working hours. You’ll get just as much done—because you have
to—and still have time to have dinner with the family.
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