¿Para qué trabajamos? | Sergio Sinay | TEDxDiagonal73

TEDx Talks2,269 words

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Translator: Ross Edwards

Reviewer: David DeRuwe I'll start with my personal relationship to work since I'm going

to talk about work today. I've been working, officially,

in the area I like, my profession - writing, in its different forms - since the age of 18. I say officially, because I think

I was working before that too when I wrote magazines for fun as a boy. I rented them out: they were handmade,

and there was only one copy of each. I rented them to classmates

and friends in the neighbourhood. I rented them out for a day, and with the money they paid me,

maybe one peso in today's money, I put the coins together and bought ink and paper

and made more magazines. So I've worked for as long as I remember. I've worked in companies

and organisations. I've worked self-employed. I've listened to many coworkers

who've worked alongside me, colleagues. I see what the world of work is like. I see it up close, and it interests me

because human connection interests me, because human mess-ups interest me, because what happens to us interests me. And work takes up,

in the most hardworking cases, in the most organised cases and in the most legal cases, a third of our adult life. Paid work, eight

of the 24 hours in each day. If we sleep, if we get a good sleep,

another eight hours. Meaning that work

takes up practically half of our conscious, waking hours. Imagine we asked someone

the question 'Why do you work?' The automatic, immediate,

built-in response from all of us who work for a salary, for an income, for a fee, the response that would come

to us, almost without thinking, would be: 'to make a living.' For a second, let's stay

on the topic of life. A German poet called Novalis said something that always stayed with me. 'Life', Novalis said, 'is nothing

in and of itself'. Really it's an opportunity for something. If I work just to make a living, then I'd do that so that my life

were an opportunity, but for what? Because if we go no further than 'I work just to lead a pleasant life,

a relatively comfortable life, where I don't need

to be constantly chasing after the things that cover my needs,' then maybe it'd have been easier, quicker and more direct to have been born a cat, spending the day in an armchair, knowing that every time I feel hungry,

there will be pellets or whatever it is. And I wouldn't ask myself

the questions human beings do. Straight away, my life

would be assured in advance. But it turns out that we work

and work and work to make a living. We all work. Even lazy people work, they need to work

enormously so that they're not given work. It takes a lot of time,

a lot of creativity, being lazy. So we're always working. It's not only the ones

who work for an income who work. A grandmother works when she makes a pie, turning a series of ingredients,

just loose ingredients by themselves, into a pie that her grandchildren

think is the best in the universe. That grandmother transformed something. There was work in that transformation. And what was transformed

ceased to be what it was to become something else. Doctors work when they change a condition

of pain or illness into health. An engineer works to build a bridge that connects two cities. The cities have a lot to offer each other, but couldn't do so

because they were isolated. A therapist works when they listen

to the pain or the problems of people who come to them, and they help those people to transform

that into a different view of life. We all work - even street sweepers, who convert a square's disorder and dirt into a place, into a space

fit for walking around, taking the kids, sitting and talking, and for drinking tea. We all work, and in human life,

work means transformation. To work means to transform. Of course, you could say: 'But there are many

other creatures that do that.' Bees make honey: they work. Beavers make damns: they work. Ovenbirds make nests: they work. Ants make roads,

extraordinary roads: they work. But I've never heard of any bees that had a midlife crisis

halfway through their life and said: 'I would have loved to make

nests my entire life, but since my mum and dad were bees,

I couldn't let them down. And in the end I did this,

but it's not what I wanted.' I've also not heard of any beavers

that wanted to make honey. Why not? The lives of other creatures

that work are predetermined. They're born knowing what they want,

they'll do it their whole life - it's part of biological programming. We don't know what we're going to do. And sometimes it takes us

over half a lifetime to know what we're going to do. That doesn't mean

we do nothing in the meantime. Why not? Because there's something

related to work called a vocation. A vocation isn't necessarily

a liking for a career or a knack for a discipline. Vocation means calling. It's a word that comes

from the Latin 'vocatio', which means calling. It's not from the outside. It's not my parents' calling,

wanting me to be a doctor. It's not society's calling,

expecting me to become this or that. It's not the government's calling, which says 'more doctors are needed,

therefore we expect you to become one.' No. It comes from within. And it's linked to a search

that's inside us all, whether we know it or not -

the search for the meaning of our life. There are 7 billion people living

on the planet today, all of us different. Because of that,

there are no random lives. And if we're all different,

and if we've always been different, that means that in every life,

there's a meaning. It's not a meaning we construct,

it's a meaning we discover. Bit by bit, we can discover the meaning of our life

if we look in different places. One place is the feelings and values

we have and how we apply them. Another is the connections we create - how those connections

give us contact with others and knowing that what we do

arrives to somebody, the confirmation of our own existence

that we receive from someone. Sometimes there is meaning in pain, in suffering that, at first,

might seem absurd. And a big source of meaning is work: as long as we are able

to understand our work as something we do in the world, taking nourishment

from the world and for it. There's an old tale

that many of you probably know. It's about three bricklayers

who were working. As they did their bricklaying, they were asked

what it was they were doing. One of them said: 'I put one brick next to the other. That's what I do every day

during my eight working hours.' Another said: 'I'm building a wall.' They're doing the same thing. 'That's what I do.' And the third one said:

'I'm building a cathedral.' They're doing the same thing. There's one that only sees the bricks, there's one who only sees the wall and there's one who sees

the purpose of their work, understanding that what they're doing

is part of a bigger thing that will last. Because work takes on meaning when the transformation we make is transformation

for the betterment of the world and leaves a print on the world. Of course, there are jobs,

and there are jobs, because drug traffickers work, and they work a lot too,

probably more than eight hours a day. Arms manufacturers and traffickers work. White slavers work. Some jobs improve the world;

some jobs make it worse. This leads us to the link

between work and values, between work and morals, and to an important question: Beyond what we're doing, does what we're doing include

the values that we believe in? Because human beings' values - moral values, the values that make

it possible for us improve the world - really exist when we live them,

not when we speak about them. You can talk a lot about values, but living them is what's important,

and living them where? In the place we live 24 hours

of every day of our life, and remember that,

if we're hard little workers, we work for eight hours, at least. So you can't have some values for life

and other values for work. When we align our life values

and our work values, we also begin to see

the meaning of our work. And this is independent of the job we do because some of us might do

the same thing our entire life. Because we like it, because in it

we have found meaning, a kind of fulfilment. And others don't do

the same thing their entire life, but over time they find

fulfilment in jobs that are different. And at some point during this work, they're able to find a flash of meaning,

a moment of fulfilment, a piece of work where meaning appears. So the important thing is that values

are constantly present, at all times. If they aren't, we'd find

ourselves stuck in a job that slowly loses meaning for us. This also leads to another question: When we work, are we what we do,

or do we do what we are? If we are what we do, we find the doctor who, when asked

what their job is, says: 'I am a doctor' and the employee who says:

'I am an employee' and the salesman who says:

'I am a salesman.' And nobody is a doctor,

a salesman or an employee. In life you do the job of a doctor,

of a salesman or an employee. It's a role in life. Because if I'm a doctor, I'm nothing

if one day I can't practice medicine. If I turn the job I do into my identity, then I'll need to do it

under all conditions, even the worst, even though I don't like it,

because if I'm not that, I'm nothing. Even if I'm exploited, I suffer,

and I don't see why, I do it because if I don't do it, I'm nothing. But if, instead of being

what I do, I do what I am, I can have different jobs throughout life,

including some that I don't like. I can do a job for a while

which I don't like at all, which isn't what I'd have chosen. But if I do what I am, I'll put into it my values,

my feelings, my way of seeing others, as an end or a means, and whatever I do, I'll be present and I'll transform

the world with that focus, which makes me unique

among 7 billion people. So, what does work offer us? Whatever work we do

because we're constantly working. If I asked you, for example, what would you do if you didn't do

what you're doing now to make a living? If you already had enough money,

what would you do? Some would say 'nothing',

many people would say 'nothing'. But probably, after five minutes

of doing nothing you'd get bored, and after 10 minutes you'd be anxious, and after 11 you'd start something,

you'd look for something to do, and that thing is then your job. Even if it may be disguised as a hobby, but something, you'd grab

something, do something and transform one situation into another,

transform one thing into another, because we need to work. Human beings arrive in the world, we receive the world and we receive

it with one condition, or two: one is to transform it, the other

is to transform it for the better. I'd even add a third: that in that transformation,

we find the meaning of our life. This is applicable - I say this based

on my own life experience - to any job that we may be doing. There's no excuse. Because as somebody once said: 'If you're not doing what you enjoy,

try to enjoy what you're doing'. Not because you have to,

not out of obligation, but because you are here,

your life is unfolding here. An important part of your life

and your relationships is unfolding here. So, in that, try to bring

out your values, your creativity, the things you have to give to the world. And I'd like to bring these reflections

to a close, if it's okay, by reading a Celtic blessing to you. It talks about work. It's very old. It has endured through time,

people and work, and it goes like this: 'May you see the beauty

of your soul in what you do. May your work bring light, health

and renewal to those who work, to those who work with you

and to those who see and receive you work. May your work never tire you. May it free springs of renewal,

inspiration and excitement within you. May you be present in what you do. May the day never bring you down. May sunrise find you

waiting for the new day with dreams, possibilities and promises. May the night find you fulfilled

and in a state of appreciation. May your work serenade your soul,

console it and renew it'. Whatever we do, whether it's paid or not, this possibility is open to us. We're at once transformative

and productive beings. Thank you very much.

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¿Para qué trabajamos? | Sergio Sinay | TEDxDiagonal73 - Y...