From the Director
Taking Some Time for Ourselves
By Elizabeth J. Clark, Ph.D., ACSW, MPH
For
as long as I can remember, I have been in a competition with time.
There never seems to be enough time in a day to get to all the
things I want to do. My mother used to laugh at me and say, "You
have 24 hours a day just like everyone else."
My near obsession with time has led to a whole lexicon about
the subject. I'm not just referring to frequently used phrases
such as a "timed agenda," or "travel time."
Instead, I think of time as a commodity that you can spend or
save, like money in the bank, and I am never happier than when
a meeting is cancelled and I have "found time." Many
of us now refer to "protecting time" on our personal
calendar so that we can attend a family event or keep a medical
appointment. I actually hear myself saying things like, "What
is the drop-dead deadline?" as though the word "deadline"
was not sufficiently descriptive.
This concern with time is evident in many aspects of my life.
I hate to be late for a meeting or appointment of any type. Like
any typical "type A behavior" personality, I have what
is called "hurry sickness." We talk fast, walk fast,
finish sentences for other people, avoid standing in lines, and
multitask whenever we can. We are impatient with the slowness
of those around us who don't seem to recognize the value of our
time.
We've heard, and rejected, all of the old clichés: "Haste
makes waste," "Stop and smell the roses," "An
unprocessed life is not worth living." Those phrases don't
apply to those of us who are time savvy.
Having said all of this, recently I was surprised to find myself
at a social work conference considering attending a session titled
"The Joy of Leisure Time." I think it was the word "joy"
that caught my attention. It couldn't have been the phrase "leisure
time," because that type of time isn't included in my time
phrasebook.
Since I actually had a "little time to spare," I attended
the session. The presenter made many excellent points, and I found
myself listening closely to her description of what is happening
in the workplaces of social workers. She spoke of social workers
who regularly work through their lunch hours, who come to work
early and leave later than the stated workplace hours, and who
regularly do work, especially paperwork and email, during the
evenings and weekends. This was happening routinely, not just
during a crisis period or when there was a project deadline. Social
workers who attended the presentation expressed concerns about
not being able to get personal chores done, about struggling to
attend functions with their families, and feeling burned out.
These concerns correlate with our recent NASW study of frontline
social workers, "Assuring the Sufficiency of a Frontline
Workforce: A National Study of Licensed Social Workers" (http://workforce.socialworkers.org/studies/natstudy.asp).
The findings noted important trends and issues facing social workers
today. The study report described cutbacks in staffing and high
vacancy rates. What we didn't find were similar cutbacks in the
need for services or in the size of individual caseloads. Social
workers across the country are routinely picking up the slack
by working extra time, not paid overtime.
The presentation made me realize that social workers everywhere
are volunteering their leisure time, not to volunteer activities,
but to their employers. The cumulative amount of this time rebate
must be hundreds of thousands of hours each year. Translate that
into dollars — not dollars for you, but dollars your employer
saves by your donation.
Maybe it's time we thought about this from a clinical perspective.
We recognize the concept of enabling. Are we enabling employers
of social workers to continue downsizing with impunity? Why shouldn't
they cut staff size when the remaining staff will volunteer their
leisure time to keep things running for free?
As social workers we also realize that one of the major symptoms
of burnout is feeling indispensable. When we are too busy at work
to take a day off or get that physical check-up or go on a needed
vacation or just get home on time to have dinner with our family,
we may be teetering on the brink of burnout.
It may be high time to look at what we are doing to our downtime.
It might be time to say, "Enough," and to reclaim our
leisure time for actual leisure pursuits.
One of the other things my mother used to remind me of was that
"time waits for no woman." Now that's one saying about
time I believe.
To comment to Elizabeth J. Clark: newscolumn@naswdc.org
From October 2006 NASW News. © 2006 National
Association of Social Workers. All Rights Reserved. NASW News
articles may be copied for personal use, but proper notice of
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