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Explore the benefits of workplace spirituality in making work more meaningful and rewarding..
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Work-as-Play
Robert Rabbin
My father died of heart failure at 53. For years, I had watched him leave the
house every morning, never excited, never eager, never inspired. He walked
silently through the door, a look of resignation on his face. He did not go to
work with his heart, and his heart failed him through neglect. Over the years, I
believe his heart hardened as he worked for a living, and finally his heart
suffocated from a lack of expression.
I have tried to live differently. Rather than work for a living, I prefer to say
that I play for a living. I do not say this as a matter of semantics. I loved my
father and I was heartbroken that he died with so much sadness in his eyes and
disappointment in his heart. Though he does not know this, he inspired me away
from sadness and disappointment and towards those things that nourish my heart
and invigorate my soul. This is his legacy to me.
As I reflect on the nature of work-as-play, I find four distinct elements.
The first element of work-as-play is enthusiasm: we have to want to do the work
we do. It has to ignite our deep love for living. We have to reach out with our
full presence — with a full yes! — and do our chosen work with our whole fiery
spirit. We must know in our heart, in the truth-knowing fluid of our soul’s
arteries, that it is right. We may not be able to explain or justify our choice,
but we know intuitively that we are on the right path, doing the right thing,
breathing the oxygen that our soul's lungs need to live.
The second element is freedom. We do not serve any master other than our innate
freedom of being. We work from our heart, with devotion. Where there is
devotion, there is freedom. We love our work because our work reveals who we
are. We become intimate with our work and those with whom we work, because the
revelations of our soul in what we do has a depth of feeling which exposes our
inside to the outside. As the poet Rumi suggests, what we do is the beauty that
we love. Beauty, love, and work, when blended together, can be called play.
When we are free, we can tell the truth, and this is the third element. In
freedom, there is no fear, no controlling mechanism to intimidate or coerce us.
So, we can let what is inside come outside. We can give full expression to our
artistic pulse, our soaring energy, our bold declarations, and our daring
inventions. We let our full artistry and passion pour out and over everything we
touch. Sharing the truth of our deep love and joy is another hallmark of
work-as-play.
Work-as-play is part enthusiasm, part freedom, part authentic self-expression.
The fourth element is devotion. Devotion is a state of being in which the life
force rushes madly from lover to beloved. How could we not give ourselves fully,
totally, absolutely to what we most love? Devotion is thus effortless, because
it is natural to live at the farthest edge of giving when one is in love. We
touch this inner core of love, and then we give ourselves to it. Our heart
demands it, our soul craves it — we will not ever hold back one ounce. Devotion
is a state of surrender, of obedience, to that which links us to the whole, to
the Universe. Devotion is a state of being whose aura is love, and whose
thoughts no longer belong to oneself, but to the single Soul of all creatures.
Perhaps there are other elements contained within this notion of work-as-play,
but they will start to turn back onto themselves. They will become mirrored
images of each other. We can say that work-as-play involves a sense of meaning.
But meaning will always be wordlessly present when we choose and accept what
moves from deeply within us.
We can say there must be a feeling of purpose, but there is no higher purpose
than letting our love dance in all that we do. It is purpose enough. We might
say that work-as-play should serve and benefit others. Work-as-play inevitably
serves and benefits others, touching them as it does with caring, beauty, love,
and freedom. Serving others is the natural outcome of anyone who works with
devotion.
My father’s legacy to me is this: grab hold of your soul and do not let go.
Follow it. Do not hesitate. Do not negotiate. Do not equivocate. Follow, and be
free.
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