Saturday, July 25, 2020
Living Amongst the Rule Mongers - Workology
Living Amongst the Rule Mongers - Workology Living Amongst the Rule Mongers Six years ago, my husband and I made our biggest purchase together. We bought our first home. We live in a quiet, gated, subdivision community in the Oklahoma City Metro. Greg and I were thrilled. The house is and was great for us and great for our growing family. Having purchased my first house by myself at the ripe age of 21, I thought I knew what to expect. House number 1 was a small 1970s bungalow a short commute to Manhattan, Kansas, where I was attending school. House number 2 was a 104 year old Victorian in a beautiful small town near Columbia, Missouri. I think I was 26 at the time. But house number 3 offered a first, and that was subdivision living. New construction, beautiful neighborhood, a walk in closet, and a jetted bath tub. It was a chance to start my new life with Greg and my new growing family. There are really two types of HR people, managers, or even organizational leaders in my mind. There are those that follow the rules to the letter just as they enforce them. HR Type Number 1 arrives to work on time and leaves their offices with empty yet organized email inboxes all without rocking the boat. Many have a long career with that organization and are rewarded for their organized and adhering ways. And then theres the second type of human resources professionals or HR Types Number 2. These are the keepers of policy and procedure who like to bend the rules. They wear flip flops in the office, work a flexible schedules, and constantly challenge authority. These HR pros are restless and are either loved or hated (sometimes both) by their peers, leaders, and organizations. These HR pros that I have found might not be a fit for the quiet picket-filled fence and gated subdivision living. Last week I received yet another letter from our subdivision. It seems my trash can is yet again viewable from the street, a serious and egregious violation. Failure to comply within 10 days will result in further legal action. Trash cans, as I must be aware have to be placed behind a screen or gate and not with the 12 foot ornamental grass plant and metal gate from which it was currently hiding. Over the past six years in our humble abode, weve received an assortment of alleged violations from trash cans to satellite dishes, or claims of dead trees contained within our property. Its driving me crazy. So much for picket-filled fence subdivision living because across the street from me lives a neighbor, a real rule monger inflicting his will on a would-be trouble making HR pro like myself. Mr. Rule Monger is the silent enforcer behind every single solitary letter. Question is how do I live with this guy? Should I merely just play by the rules? Its taking every ounce of my being to keep from leaving a fire-filled bag of poop upon his doorstep. But I know better especially since he has video surveillance throughout his yard after several run-ins with other neighbors. As an HR pro, I know exactly what I would do. Sit down and have a rational conversation. Establish a relationship and weld my human resource knowledge and influence to gain an amount of respect and work to understand his point of view. Maybe Id blind cc a couple people on email or play politics. Except this isnt my place of employment. There is no CEO to play nice with. Instead its literally where I live; my home turf. Living Amongst the Rule Mongers How do you live and work among difficult people within your life? And what should I do to make living the American dream less about looking behind my back and enjoying what my home has to offer? Im open to your suggestions and recommendations. How can I live among the rule monger?
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