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Marriage Counseling Are You A
Workaholic
Justin, a thirty-five year old executive at a high-pressure
investment firm works 60-70 hours per week. Even on vacation,
he often slips away from the rest of the family to go on-line,
check messages and answer phone calls. Until recently, he saw
nothing abnormal about his behavior; in fact, everyone at his
job works like that.
In the United States, we value work. Americans labor longer
hours than workers in any other industrialized nation. In fact,
in Western Europe, Americans are viewed as a “nation of
workaholics.”
According to a 1998 study by the Families and Work Institute in
New York, the average American now works 44 hours of work per
week, which represents an increase of 3.5 hours since 1977.
This is far more than the workers in France (39 hours per week)
and Germany (40). According to a new report from the United
Nations International Labor Organization (ILO), “Workers in the
United States are putting in more hours than anyone else in the
industrialized world.”
The ILO statistics show that in 2000, the average American
worked almost one
more week of work than the year before; working an average of
1,978 hours – up from 1,942 hours in 1990. Americans now work
longer hours than Canadian, Japanese, or Australian
workers.
What are we working for? It’s not vacations. The typical
American worker has an average of two weeks of vacation as
compared to four - six weeks for their European
counterparts.
For happiness? According to regular surveys by the National
Opinion Research Center of the University of Chicago, no more
Americans report they are “very happy” now than in 1957,
despite near doubling in personal consumption expenditures.
Indeed, the world’s people have consumed as many goods and
services since 1950 as all previous generations put together,
yet report that they are not any happier.
There are many costs in working so hard. People tend to cut
back on sleep and time with their families. A recent survey
found that almost a third of people working more than 48 hours
a week said that exhaustion was affecting married life. Nearly
a third admitted that work-related tiredness was causing their
sex life to suffer, and 14% reported a loss of or reduced sex
drive. They also complained that long hours and overwork led to
arguments and tensions at home. Two out of five people working
more than 48 hours a week blamed long hours for disagreements
and said they felt guilty at not pulling their weight with
domestic chores.
So how do you know if your job has turned into workaholic
habits? Here are some of the warning signs:
*Your home is organized just like another office.
*Colleagues describe you as hard working, needing to win, and
overly committed.
*You keep “technology tethers” like cell phones, pagers and
laptops with you all times, even on vacations.
*Friends either don’t call anymore, or you quickly get off the
phone when they do call.
*Sleep seems like a waste of time.
*Work problems circle in your mind, even during time off.
*Work makes you happier than any other aspect of your life.
*People who love you complain about the hours you work and beg
you to take some time off.
If you experience some of these warning signs on a regular
basis, it may be time to
re-evaluate how you are handling work in your life. A healthy
marriage takes time and commitment. Don't be so busy making a
living that you forget to make a life.
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Please report any
broken links to: info@endlessrelationships.com
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