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4 minute read
OPINION
The Great Resignation or The Great Liberation?
By Jamal Jivanjee
What is your life worth to you? $20, $40, $100 an hour? Putting a monetary value on something of such value as your life feels obscene. Unfortunately, far too many people come to the end of their life only to realize, and regret, that they traded their life away for survival. Most people do not get the opportunity to stop and take a break from survival mode long enough to reflect on their life and their own inherent value until they are confronted with their own mortality. Enter 2020. For the first time in modern history, on a global scale, humanity was compelled to collectively pause as a result of the pandemic. People were forced to take a break from the rat race of survival. As a result, many began to think about their lives, their desires, and their purpose. When the pandemic restrictions were eventually lifted, many saw life beyond the limiting lens of survival and decided they could no longer incrementally trade their life away for money. This has led to what is being coined "The Great Resignation." For almost five years of my precious life, I voluntarily put myself in a state penitentiary for convicted felons. Why would I put myself in prison you might ask? The answer is pretty simple and straightforward. I did it for a paycheck. Like many of us, I was brought up in a home that emphasized the all-consuming need to survive. My father immigrated to the United States from an impoverished part of the world and my mother was raised in a part of the Midwest where hard work to put food on the table represented the highest achievement of human potential. As a child, it didn’t take long for me to pick up on the subliminal message: life is something worth trading away for survival. Like my ancestors before me, I followed the well-worn path of finishing high school, starting a family, and subsequently struggling to find work. I was able to become a corrections officer in a state prison due to a contact of my father’s who helped me apply and secure an interview. After graduating from training academy and completing a lengthy probationary evaluation, I started my employment. What ensued was a five-year prison sentence. I was an employee of the state, but I spent the best hours of my day behind bars. I discovered that the line between prisoner and prison guard is actually pretty thin. The running joke among the staff was that we were all sentenced to life in prison, we just did it in eight-hour installments.
Beverly Hills Art Show
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October 15 & 16
A FREE EVENT!
Exceptional Art in its 49th Year | Food Trucks | Wine & Beer Garden 225 artists on 4 blocks in Beverly Gardens Park 1300 Park Way, Beverly Hills, CA 90210 beverlyhills.org/artshow #bhartshow #bhartsandculture
Although I put myself in a literal prison for a paycheck, I’m convinced this is an appropriate metaphor for what we are all conditioned to do without giving it much thought. Prison is anywhere we feel forced to go in exchange for time. When we trade time for money, what we are actually trading away is our life. An hour of our time spent in this way actually is an hour closer to the grave. We were born to work. However, our work needs to be connected to more than survival. While businesses need employees to produce their products and services, and we all need to earn a living wage to meet life’s needs and expenses, the workforce of the future is rapidly evolving. Business leaders who simply focus on the bottom line and see their employees as cogs in a corporate wheel will struggle to maintain a competent and sufficiently-staffed workforce. This is exactly what we are currently seeing in industries across the spectrum. Many of these businesses and corporations will not be able to survive
this current revolution. Business leaders who understand that "The Great Resignation" is really "The Great Liberation" will be able to facilitate an evolving workforce in a way that will mutually benefit their own companies as well as their employees. A new paradigm is emerging in which employees need to feel they are investing their time and talent into a more worthwhile vision than simply profits and bottom lines. Employees also need to feel their current jobs are preparing them to move forward on their own personal journeys. Such companies will not only survive "The Great Liberation," they will serve as the backbone to a more conscientious approach to business that benefits everyone. Jamal Jivanjee is an Amazon best-selling author, a podcaster, and a full-time life coach with over 20 years of experience. Learn more about RE Jivanjee, and his latest book “Living for a Living,” by iMAgiNE visiting jamaljivanjee.com.Join the conversation
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RE iMAgiNE
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RE iMAgiNE
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Reimagine is a new church in Marina Del Rey offering a unique approach to life and faith. We are a positive community committed to growth and depth–utilizing compelling digital content, regular contemplative practices, and both individual and group opportunities for spiritual direction (we call it “executive coaching for the soul”). We meet in-person monthly in the Marina and weekly online.
READY FOR SOMETHING GENUINELY NEW?
SPECIAL FALL “PUBLIC LAUNCH” KICK-OFF
October 9 @ 9:30 AM–Firsherman’s Village @ the Marina Room in Whiskey Red’s–Scan the QR code (left) to RSVP or to find out more. Join us as we treat you to brunch and start a 6-week series called “Finding Peace”–focused on living in harmony and wholeness in a divisive world.
FOR MORE INFORMATION ON REIMAGINE
For more info, scan the QR code (left), check out our website www.ReimagineChurch.church, or email david@reimaginechurch.church.