What is good human work?
by Jen Labanowski & Shelly Smith, our co-founders
We were chatting with a friend one day, who told us he was feeling nervous about his plans for the evening. He explained that he was going out to dinner with a woman who he had been casually dating for a few weeks. He was planning to break things off, because it just didn’t feel like a good match.
He told us, “This is going to be so awkward. I wish it was socially acceptable to break things off with someone via text”.
Jen piped up, “It’s completely socially acceptable to break up with someone via text! Hell, it’s socially acceptable to just disappear from someone’s life with zero explanation. And how shitty is it that so many of us find that acceptable? The fact that you feel compelled to go have the conversation, face to face, even though it’ll probably be awkward and uncomfortable, says so much about your personal moral code. You’re brave enough to do the right thing, and that’s amazing. You’re about to do some good. human. work. Good for you”.
That conversation got us thinking about the idea of “good human work” and what the term might mean. In this case, our friend chose to be brave enough to have an uncomfortable evening due to his basic human instinct to protect. He chose to protect her heart and to protect his own integrity, when it would be so much easier to just run away from the discomfort.
As a society, we are regularly asked to abandon the things that make us human. We spend countless hours of our lives sitting in chairs, staring at screens, and tapping at glass. It’s no wonder that we frequently find ourselves feeling:
unsteady.
uneasy.
hollow.
restless.
stuck.
We believe that there are five core needs that we must meet in order to truly feel human. Oftentimes, we structure our lives to meet several of these basic human needs, but we may lose sight of the others. If we can identify our unmet human needs, we can then do the good work that will make us more human again. This is what we call…