The Liminal Landscape: 2022 Revisited

 

Summing up the past year in terms of themes, trends, new ideas and developments in the workplace proves not as straightforward in 2022 as we might have expected. In fact, SmarterWisdom believes that any new place at which we have arrived this year isn’t about content at all, but rather about state—state of being, state of understanding, state of wonder! It’s a position that perhaps we would benefit from paying close attention to, even though this moment—or space—is liminal. To be in a liminal space is “to be on the precipice of something new but not quite there yet.” A liminal space can be metaphorical, emotional or physical. And for many people, perhaps understandably, it’s an uncomfortable position.

A new year always provides us with a moment—if we are willing to claim it—for reflection and consideration. Where am I? Where am I headed? Do I have new personal and professional goals? What did I learn from 2022 and where would I like to be in 2023? Given the liminal or in-between situation in which we find ourselves, SmarterWisdom hopes that we can help you define and make the most of this opportunity.

Certainly one theme through 2022, as we embraced the hope of the end of the pandemic, a hope not to be realized unfortunately, was the idea of reclaiming our lives. This placed us in a liminal state of being on a threshold. Both individually and as members of families and groups, we edged towards giving time to the nourishment and growth we enjoy during free and recreational time, alone or with friends and family. Our approach to life shifted; we travelled a bit more, we had coffee, drinks and meals with others. Some of us worked to establish boundaries between work and home. Friendship became a vital aspect of our lives, because once again we could begin and build on relationships with others—and not at 6-feet distance or on a screen!

Before the pandemic, research had identified that having a close friend at work was a key element of employee engagement. Many workers who had entered the workplace in 2019 for the first time reported feeling that they missed the step of meeting colleagues in person, since they had come on board during the time that work-from-home was mandated. For these individuals and their organizations, developing friendships through and beyond the workplace became an important focus. Coaching programs in fact emerged to help people make healthy friendships in the workplace.

In the face of major research and further understanding of the need to pay attention to our mental health, self-care—which included making healthy connections with others—became a stated and even shared or public part of the lives we reclaimed. The phrase radical self-care appeared more and more. In a recent Forbes article (November 2022), Bryan Robinson defined radical self-care as: “… going beyond merely saying no and setting boundaries. It entails going against popular opinion or refusing to appease others, even when they call you selfish or weak.” In the same piece, 7 Ways To Practice Radical Self-Care When Your Mental Health Is At Stake, Robinson draws on data which says that: “…an estimated 12 billion workdays are lost annually due to depression and anxiety, costing the global economy nearly $1 trillion (U.S.)Still, many business leaders continue to practice old hat tricks from the dark ages. They believe self-sacrifice, iron-fisted leadership and criticism build the organization and the company’s bottom line. And they believe when the company requires employees to work longer and harder, it gets a bigger bang for its buck.”

SmarterWisdom sees this ongoing issue as producing a state of conflict in the workplace. It is a tough and yet critical issue with which employing organizations must grapple; pitting self-care versus “suck it up” did not work well pre-pandemic, and it is even less productive now. Framed this way many individuals and organizations are diametrically opposed. Until we tackle this corrosive underlying issue, re-inventing what humane work looks like post-pandemic will be impossible.

Without a resolution, there can be no real return to normal, and no shared definition of what normal is! What we see is in many ways chaotic in fact—a state of being that is topsy turvy and helter-skelter all at once. Isn’t this, however, a situation that offers opportunity for change and improvement in the workplace? Unlike opting for joining the Great Resignation or Quiet Quitting, which deny the possibility of building for the future as a community of workers, might we embrace what is now and what we might want to see in the future as options for positive change?

SmarterWisdom believes that the real reframing of what work is means welcoming the state we find ourselves in and creating some new paradigms. Think of a sliding scale, one where different models exist across a continuum of alternatives, with the only constant being change! Sound a bit messy? Perhaps, but let’s consider some of the opportunities it might provide us with: a redrawing of boundaries between work and home, employees taking more ownership in what their place of work looks like, a chance for more inclusion and belonging for those who are new to the workplace, and perhaps options for employee benefits that relate more to the individual than one-size-fits-most.

Finding ourselves on the precipice of something new, and not quite there yet, this liminal space at the beginning of 2023, gives us the chance  to build and own new kinds of work communities. Collectively defining how our workplace functions and succeeds will surely herald a new era of strong generative relationships, and dare we suggest, more contentment at work?

 

 

 

  

 

 

 

 

 




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