... as employers require individuals to check digital devices and respond 24/7, there's no clear separation between home and work. Samuel Greengard 1
One of the key revolutions in medieval Europe was the idea of the ownership of time. It allowed Europe to create new institutions and was for good or ill one of the underlying cornerstones of the Industrial Revolution. It created the framework for the modern corporation. It also create the framework for social revolutions in slavery, child labor, and education. It is one of the things that makes being a "wage slave" satisfactory. It condenses time into money and allows us to trade money for time.
Electronic devices may inadvertently be reversing this. We may be heading back toward a world of serfs with little to no choice. With all the talk of "work life integration", some people may be losing the ability to manage time and are letting tasks manage them. There's the risk of tasks that garner our attention or that appear urgent push out the things that are truly important. With the frenetic pace many people have created for themselves and their overbooked lives, most lose the ability to take time to reflect and actively choose what is important.
Electronic toys - like the one I am typing on, have the ability to take over our lives. One of my former managers had the habit of working at odd hours to ensure he had a "work life balance". It was not unusual to receive emails composed and sent at 2:00 am, when the man was on vacation. I still entertain the fantasy of being his boss and putting his cell phone and lap top under lock and key when he leaves on vacation. I see many people trading freedom for a higher status, larger paychecks, more company owned devices with the expectation they will take the lap top - cell phone - tablet home and be available. It appears they believe that being busy is the same as being important - that the volume of work that they cram into their lives equates to having a life in balance because they can attend family activities.
I view cell phones as electronic leashes. If you give me a cell phone, I expect you will call with an expectation I will respond. I don't want to be so important I need to be available at anyone's beck and call except my children. And then only until they are self sufficient. I've built firewalls into my life - as was so succinctly put on my last review: does his work and goes home. And the projects are on time, and the fire drills are ignored. The non work troubles stay out of work. Work troubles don't go home. The work lap top stays off, except for the occasional important late meeting. The occasions are rare.
There is a movement called the Sabbath Manifesto. They're recommending we disconnect periodically for time to reflect. It sounds like a great idea to me. It's another firewall to keep life and work separated.
Sources:
1 Samuel Greengard, Communications of the ACM, 10/2011 Vol. 54 No. 10, Living in a Digital World, pp. 17-19
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