March 2000 - Spirituality in the
Workplace
- Spirituality in the Workplace: A New Insight
to Business
- Definitions: Spirituality and Religion
- Internet Resources (books, links)
Spirituality in the Workplace
Our guest author this month is Alan Pritz, who wrote a chapter on
"Spirituality in the Workplace" for a new book, Training
For Tough Topics, that is being published by the American Management
Association this year.
Alan L. Pritz, Founder and President of Inner Resource
Enhancement, (Minneapolis, MN 612-721-4100),
conducts a workshop on “Spirituality In The Workplace” for the
University of St. Thomas’ Management Center. His consulting business provides training on Mind-Body-Spirit
interactions for health care, business and educational organizations.
Thanks, Alan!!
Spirituality
In The Workplace: A New Insight To Business
Monday morning, office doors open, coffee's on and it's business as
usual. Or is it? For years, business routines have changed mostly as a
result of externally driven technological advances and shifting market
demands.
Currently however, an intriguing development is rising on the
organizational horizon that involves an evolving relationship between
two odd bedfellows, business and spirituality. Commerce it seems, like
science and medicine, is gradually reviewing spirituality-related themes
within its operating paradigms, if only because interest in such matters
is so pervasive.
The business community reaction to this latest phenomenon is
mixed, ranging from curiosity, exploration and implementation of
eye-opening programs to indifference, rejection and outright hostility.
In this article, we'll examine what the workplace spirituality
movement is all about, see if it truly offers something of commercial
value, and explore its impact on both the local and national business
scenes.
History
The emergence of spirituality in modern business has roots from
multiple sources.
One source, the slash-and-burn economics of the 1970s
and 1980s, generated a workforce strongly antagonistic to the toxic
nature of certain corporate machinations. Ongoing economic upheaval
produced prolonged stress, which in turn caused rampant employee
burnout, increases in absenteeism, medical leave and turnover costs.
Having weathered that storm, seasoned and new generation employees
silently vowed to reject further de-humanizing treatment that businesses
can dispense in the name of sound fiscal policies.
This mindset coupled with a prosperous economy fostered greater
entrepreneurial activity and an increasingly tight, selective
job-market. As a result, HR departments have had to creatively scramble
to recruit and retain quality employees.
Subsequent sensitivity to
workforce interests has revealed burgeoning employee desire to work for
socially responsible, ethically driven organizations that allow the
"whole self" to be brought to work and not parked at the
office door. This in turn has sparked corporate recognition of the value
of promoting personal integration at work; of harnessing not only
intellectual capability for peak performance, but emotional and
spiritual passion as well.
A second source of workplace spirituality stems from advances in
science and healthcare. Growing research in behavioral sciences and
psychoneuroimmunology have established that physical fitness and a
positive attitude can mitigate the effects of stress and reduce health
care expenses.
Enter an organizational platform for holistic health
considerations through wellness programs. In 1975 Herbert Benson, M.D.,
a Harvard cardiologist, pushed the wellness envelope further.
Demonstrating that certain meditation practices produced a relaxation
effect that reduced blood pressure without medicinal agents, Benson's
work catalyzed the use of mental tools such as "focus words,"
guided imagery and visualization to promote overall health.
One result
of his efforts is that pragmatic, and unfortunately, highly stressed
corporate individuals have been given a legitimate "go-ahead"
to turn their attention within to harness the healing power of mind.
The third and perhaps most important contributor to workplace
spirituality is the rapid rise of social interest in such matters
coupled with a generation of baby-boom executives experiencing mid-life
review. Without doubt, exploration of spiritual themes has become a
national, if not international point of focus.
A trip to the local
bookstore provides ample evidence of this, displaying books on
spirituality in topic areas ranging from love making to professional
coaching, pet communication to work. Institutions of higher education
like the University of St. Thomas are hosting symposiums on workplace
spirituality and introducing courses about similar themes.
In fact,
attention surrounding work and spirit is growing to such an extent that
web sites and international conferences on business and consciousness
now exist solely to explore these issues.
The desire to examine spirituality is only natural. We are, after
all, beings with intense curiosity about our metaphysical origins and
purpose. That this would impact business persons in their mid-life years
is simply a matter of time and aging. That many such individuals also
hold powerful decision-making jobs is perhaps serendipitous because
they're better positioned to affect corporate culture change than any
average spiritual enthusiast could.
Such convergence of popular interest
with top-down organizational influence creates a healthy foundation and
conduit for spiritual pursuits to root and grow.
Clearly, interest in matters of heart and soul has been rising for
years. Yet, what's unique about this phenomenon is its broad visceral
appeal, that it touches people of all orientations in a profound way.
Moreover, it cuts across ideological boundaries by differentiating
between spiritual and religious meaning and evokes a keen desire among
enthusiasts to integrate the former in a workplace context.
The message
ultimately is about being able to embrace what's most meaningful in
life, spirituality, with where one spends the most hours during a day,
work.
Spirituality and religious belief are compatible though not
identical; they may or may not co-exist.
In office settings, it is
absolutely crucial to understand the difference between these two.
Spirituality
In "A Study of Spirituality in the Workplace" by Ian I.
Mitroff and Elizabeth A. Denton, Sloan Management Review (Summer,
1999) spirituality was defined as "the basic feeling of being
connected with one's complete self, others and the entire
universe."
The Mayo Spirituality in Healthcare Committee defined
spirituality as "a process by which one discovers inner wisdom
and vitality that give meaning and purpose to all life events."
And in my Pocket Guide To Meditation, I describe spirituality
as
"the essence of all traditions, the Truth hiding behind and
within every form. It is the medium through which individuals
establish direct communion with God, regardless of formal orientation.
"Spirituality is both the immediate experience of That-Which-Is-Holy,
the Higher Power by whatever name, and living by those principles and
practices which foster this relationship."
Religion
The Mayo Spirituality in Healthcare Committee defines religion as
"a formalized system of beliefs and practices shared by a
group."
The definition I use in my workplace spirituality program for religion
is: "the organization of spiritually based rules, rituals and
doctrine surrounding, and developing from, the life and teachings of a
Founding Individual or Revelatory Source."
In the Sloan article,
no specific definition of religion is given yet participants clearly
feel it has more organized, formal and denominational attributes than spirituality. The latter was typically perceived to allow for and
support religious beliefs while the reverse is not always so.
In the workplace, these distinctions are important for various
reasons.
Chief among them is that a person can pursue his/her cherished
spiritual beliefs without demanding doctrinal complicity from peers. To
seek the latter is to court an infringement of religious freedom
lawsuit.
Understanding this is necessary because again, spirituality is
not the same as religion.
To underscore this point I refer once again to
the Sloan article where study participants (comprised of HR executives
and managers) felt that religion was a highly inappropriate expression
at work whereas spirituality was very appropriate for discussion and/or
exploration.
What's the difference between the two?
Elaborating briefly
upon the definitions given earlier, several key features that
distinguish them include: Spirituality is considered nondenominational,
inclusive, universally applicable and embracing of diverse expression
while emphasizing interconnectedness of being.
Religion tends to be
dogmatic, exclusive, divisive and narrow.
Obviously, this is a
generalized sentiment, but one shared by many study participants.
Value
The question of how to address spirituality in the workplace is
undeniably challenging and made more so because empirical studies of its
affects are few.
Two research projects that examine these matters
include the Sloan article already mentioned and a study by the High Tor
Alliance regarding contemplative practice within corporate life.
Both
conclude workplace spirituality is beneficial and possibly necessary for
long term organizational survival.
For the most part, workplace spirituality is handled as intriguing
yet uncomfortable. All too often, it elicits an ambivalent response that
courts inquiry while simultaneously striving to maintain "a healthy
distance." As such, it's primarily addressed in couched terms of
ethics, vision, values, meaning and working with passion.
Some organizations believe "higher domain" issues are
beyond the scope of their training and responsibility. For them the
historic separation of church and state represents a very welcome status
quo.
Others feel workplace spirituality offers an ideologically safe and
necessary reconciliation between higher life purpose and the innovative
activity needed for an emerging global economy. Enthusiasts believe it
provides value by harnessing the greatest creative potential available
to generate world-class services and products.
Even still, there is the
realization that organizations must learn how to broach the subject and
tap this vital force without offending co-workers or causing cultural
discord.
Activity
Despite the lack of empirical data there is increasing
effort to honor human spirituality as a natural force to be used, not
hidden.
Two pioneers in the movement are Martin Rutte and Richard
Barrett.
Rutte, co-author of Chicken Soup for the Soul at Work, supports
developing worksite discussion groups where people can examine spiritual
matters in meaningful ways.
Barrett, formerly the Values Coordinator at
the World Bank, started a Spiritual Unfoldment Society for them in 1993
and organized their first International Conference on Ethics, Spiritual
Values and Sustainable Development in 1995. Author of Liberating the
Corporate Soul, Barrett uses his unique measurement instruments to help
businesses enhance their performance through optimal alignment of
organizational values and culture.
In Minnesota
Local interest in these matters is substantial and continuing to
grow. Indicative of this is the response to a work and spirituality
conference sponsored by the University of St. Thomas in May of 1999.
It drew senior representatives from firms like American Express,
American Red Cross, 3M, HealthSystem Minnesota, Hewlett-Packard, MN
Federation of Teachers, NSP, St. Paul Companies, University of
Minnesota and Honeywell - not a lackluster audience.
Other local
individuals with noted interests and/or activity in this area include
myself, Dan Hanson, president of the Fluid Dairy Division at Land
O'Lakes, Kevin Cashman, president of LeaderSource, Bob Wahlstedt,
founder of Reell Precision; and Craig and Patricia Neal, founders of
Heartland Institute.
National Interest
On the national scene, Exxon, AT&T, Boeing, Motorola,
Levi-Strauss, Intel, Microsoft, and the National Institute of Health
are but a few organizations that have found value in exploring and
implementing spirituality-based themes within their operations.
And
the list continues to grow.
Conclusion
Business is beginning to investigate new inner frontiers.
While
spirituality may enhance results when integrated into the workplace, its
presence is still fragile. The challenge is to accept that certain
domains of reality may exist beyond the scope of modern measures that
are both healthy for individuals and productive for corporate
activities.
Definitely a very personal matter, those who are exploring
the spiritual dimension in business may well foreshadow the inwardly
balanced shape of things to come.
Copyright and More Information
© Copyright 1999 Inner Resource Enhancement. All Rights
Reserved. (Article used by author's permission).
Books
- Disclosure: We get a
small commission for purchases made via links to Amazon.
Alan Pritz's chapter on "Spirituality in the Workplace is in an upcoming book AMACOM; 1st edition (January 15, 2001)
ISBN: 0814470742
Extensive list of Books, Articles, Conferences,
Internet Resources related to Spirituality in the Workplace (http://www.itstime.com/slinks.htm)
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