After reviewing the “Four Stages of
Burnout” (email stressdoc@aol.com for my
classic essay), with time a consideration, I peppered Anne with questions, and
discovered that she has a good working and mutually supportive relationship
with her staff. However, the team cannot
keep up with the workload. Initially,
Anne said there was no money to hire new staff.
Feeling discouraged, she has thought of leaving the Department. For the last six months, every two weeks,
she’s been checking new county job postings, alas, to no avail.
My sense was that Anne, despite her
considerable knowledge and experience, was starting to gasp for air, while treading
water in a whirlpool that’s slowly sucking her under. However, exhaustion alone was not holding her
down. She was also feeling bound by the
likelihood that a change of position means taking a demotion for the next
couple of years. Transferring into a
lower payment grade reduces the monetary value of her final retirement package,
that “pot of gold” looming precariously over a two-year, almost-within-my-grasp
horizon. Will she be able to outlast the
taxing if not toxic status quo with mind-body health intact? Anne is caught in the old “Financial-Stress-Retirement
Catch-22.”
Internal
and External Intervention Steps and Strategies
With little time to spare, I proposed here-and-now
efforts to patch some “battlefield wounds,” plug the energy drain, and generate
“higher level” purpose.” Consider these
strategic recommendations for transforming angst and anger into problem solving
that emphasizes camaraderie and confrontation along with commitment-testing and
creative community-building:
1. Circle the Wagons.
When Anne responded to my question about team meeting frequency (“every
two weeks”), I immediately suggested a 5-10 minute morning huddle, as much to
remind the group that “we have each other’s back,” as to share battle zone data
and critical time lines. Anne jumped at
that suggestion.
2. Generate a Tangible Document and a Good Faith
Test. Earlier I mentioned the difficulty in hiring
new staff. However, with a little
probing I discovered that Anne’s boss fairly recently said that if she could
produce a facts and figures proposal-report county leadership might consider
new departmental hiring for her shop.
Anne acknowledged she hasn’t been able
to gear up to do the report. (I sensed
the report was not a Herculean task.) Of
course, some “spinning her wheels” resistance comes from being overloaded. However, another obstacle drags her down – third
stage burnout “cynicism.” Her implicit
message: Why waste my time! Will a report really make any difference? Alas, it may not just be exhaustion that
leads to resignation…it may also be frustration or anger. I can imagine Anne thinking, it’s obvious that reinforcement is urgent;
why should I have to jump another bureaucratic hoop?
Once again I tapped into her vulnerable
yet smoldering emotional state. Intuitively
sensing she needed added motivation and meaning, I expressed the belief that
working on this report really provides an opportunity to clarify two basic
choices – to weather the storm or jump ship.
By generating an objective document, which can only clearly express the pressing
need for additional staff, the sinking boat/life jacket call for arms is in upper
management’s hands. Their response
becomes a litmus test regarding concerns, commitments, and priorities as well
as an omen for staying or moving on. And
with this report, “You will have done all you could for yourself and your team.” Anne saw the light and, in a way, so did I.
3. Battle and Break Out of the Job Search Box.
The final intervention step-strategy complemented step #2. It was apparent that her regular in-house job
listings search was proving futile. I
asked Anne if there was a Career Advancement Department or if there was an
individual higher up the organizational ladder who might have some aerial
view-inside perspective on other management position openings. In fact, there really wasn’t a career path
resource for most managers; however there was a District Head (DH) who ran a
special leadership meeting for higher-grade managers. Unfotunately, Anne was not eligible to
attend, and it would likely be a couple of years before she could obtain
eligibility (at which time she hoped to be in a position to retire).
Sensing this DH was a potential
resource, I asked Anne about setting up a meeting with him. Alas, she was averse as it violated
bureaucratic norms if not standard policy; someone at his level just was not
approached by a Department Manager. I
inquired about getting permission from her supervisor; this tactic was also
shot down. (Anne did not seem perturbed
about discussing her current job search efforts with her supervisor.)
Finding
a Pass in the Impasse
Amidst our back and forth, seemingly
thinking out loud, Anne lamented the lack of a program-pathway that enabled most
managers to have adequate emotional support and lateral position-transfer options. And this wish was just the opening needed. Again I challenged Anne to flesh out a
proposal for a role support/career advancement process-plan, not just for
herself but also for colleagues who felt bureaucratically stressed and boxed
in.
Finally, Anne stopped her
counterpunching; we had reached consensus.
In my estimation, the bottom-line moral of this interplay: Many individuals, who are not able to simply
fight or advocate for their own interests (perhaps viewing such a stance as too
selfish or self-serving) will leap to the barricades to defend the rights and
opportunities of others. Taking a
“larger” position-action not only provides safety in numbers, but transforms
the motivational frame from “me” to “we.”
In addition, I shared with the group
that Anne’s and my willingness to battle back and forth, not to give up in
frustration, but to challenge each other, culminated in an “outside the box”
synthesis. (Of course, you may have to
discriminate between people capable of this manner of genuine, if not
provocative, ideational interaction and those dysfunctional antagonists – power
or egoal-driven, “my way or the highway,” bosses or passive-aggressive
and “zero sum game” competitors who hold grudges and become vindictive.)
Actually, our cognitive spiral
reflected the insightful observation of John Dewey, 19th c. pragmatic
philosopher and the father of American Public Education:
Conflict
is the gadfly of thought. It stirs us to
observation and memory; it shocks us out of sheep-like passivity. It instigates to invention and sets us at
noting and contriving. Conflict is the sine qua non of reflection and ingenuity.
Closing Observation:
There are times, especially at the “bureaucratic burnout battlefront,”
when we all need a TLC “stress buddy”:
someone who will give us “Tender Loving Criticism” and “Tough Loving
Care.” Surely, words to help one and
all…Practice Safe Stress!
Mark
Gorkin, MSW, LICSW, "The Stress Doc" ™, a Licensed Clinical Social Worker, is an acclaimed keynote,
kickoff and webinar speaker as well as "Motivational Humorist & Team
Communication Catalyst" known for his interactive, inspiring, and FUN
programs for both government agencies and major corporations. In
addition, the "Doc" is a Team Building and Organizational Development
Consultant as well as a Critical Incident/Grief Intervention Expert for
Business Health Services, a National EAP/Wellness/OD Company. He is
providing "Stress and Communication,” as well as “Managing Change,
Leadership and Team Building" programs for a variety of units at Ft. Hood,
Texas and for Army Community Services and Family Advocacy Programs at Ft.
Meade, MD and Ft. Belvoir, VA as well as Andrews Air Force Base/Behavioral
Medicine Services.
A former Stress and Violence Prevention Consultant for the US Postal Service, the Doc is the author of Practice Safe Stress and of The Four Faces of Anger. The Stress Doc blog appears in such platforms as HR.com, WorkforceWeek.com, and MentalHelpNet. His award-winning, USA Today Online "HotSite" – www.stressdoc.com – was called a "workplace resource" by National Public Radio (NPR). For more info on the Doc's "Practice Safe Stress" programs or to receive his free e-newsletter, email stressdoc@aol.com or call 301-875-2567.
A former Stress and Violence Prevention Consultant for the US Postal Service, the Doc is the author of Practice Safe Stress and of The Four Faces of Anger. The Stress Doc blog appears in such platforms as HR.com, WorkforceWeek.com, and MentalHelpNet. His award-winning, USA Today Online "HotSite" – www.stressdoc.com – was called a "workplace resource" by National Public Radio (NPR). For more info on the Doc's "Practice Safe Stress" programs or to receive his free e-newsletter, email stressdoc@aol.com or call 301-875-2567.