
TIPS4STRESS
Stress at Work – The Cause
The phrase 'stress at work' has a dual meaning. On the one hand, it simply refers to stress experienced while on the job, usually because of some aspect of it. On the other hand, it can mean that stress is at work on you - stress is working on you, and usually in ways that are extremely unpleasant.
These two meanings are not completely unrelated. When you endure
work-initiated stress the results are harmful to your physical
health and your mental well-being. As with any problem, it helps to
look at the fundamental causes in order to work towards a long-term
solution.
There are a hundred immediate possible causes for job-related
stress. Employees and managers alike are often given unrealistic
deadlines to make near-impossible goals. Competitive fast-paced
business can be fun. But when the intermediate goals don't serve
valid business ends - improving sales, optimizing work flow,
enhancing communication - they are generally resented.
Add to that the all-too-common unreasonable boss or uncooperative
co-worker. In companies large and small there are too frequently
people in charge who are disrespectful and poorly qualified to lead
others. They are generally more interested in flattering their
manager than improving productivity and getting the job done.
Those two factors - mis-directed goals and unfair managers - explain
the response that most people give when asked if they experience
work-related stress and why: absence of control over their lives.
Many individuals have well-developed problem solving skills.
Women in the workplace who are also mothers know very well how to
manage time, multi-task multiple demands and innovate new solutions.
They practice those skills every day at home. They also know a bit
more than most about how to settle disputes among individuals, all
of whom may be partly wrong and partly right.
Men, too, have ample experience in prioritizing resource
expenditures, responding to complaints and deciding when to push and
when to compromise. They practice that at home every day.
But the workplace often fails to mirror the freedom to use one's
thinking skills and the power to enact a workable solution. More
often, goals come from above and little debate is allowed.
Individuals employed in organizations of that kind experience
obligations without authority - a guarantee of stress.
The single most-often cited reason for stress in the workplace boils
down to that - demands, but without the resources to meet them. When
an individual is placed in the unresolvable conflict between "I
must" and "I can't", stress is the inevitable result.
Fortunately, some organizations are beginning to recognize this and
are taking steps to change. With luck, you may be employed by one.
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