Let’s make it easy
Many of us have lofty goals, not just for us, but for our employees. We will eat less. We will exercise more. We start out with great enthusiasm. We imagine our future selves as energetic, alert, and able to cope with the everyday stresses the workplace brings.
We have little trouble knowing what to do. It’s the actual doing it that makes things tricky. Workplace wellness programs offer rewards for good behavior. Nutritional and exercise information is important. But long-term habits don’t change overnight by simply having information presented to us. Don’t you agree?
Workplace environment
I’m sure we can agree that a healthier workplace environment makes sense.
At one time the publishing industry was said to run on alcohol. Of course, three-martini lunches and smoking are long gone from the workplace. But at the time, few saw smoking at work as worth complaining about. It was normal, just like sitting in a chair all day at meetings, or in front of a computer.
Can you imagine a caffeine-free workplace? Yes, it’s hard to imagine. Yet caffeine is a powerful stimulant, along with its inevitable let down. If caffeine addiction wasn’t so widespread it wouldn’t be seen as normal. I want to point out here that your writer doesn’t abstain but is a moderate user.
Employers welcomed such a stimulant. It gave the illusion of promoting productivity, and in a sense it did ─ compared to how things used to be. In the days of the Industrial Revolution, the drink of choice at work was beer. Imagine! The point is that workplace orthodoxy changes over time.
Even small changes can lead in the right direction. How easy would it be for the office canteen to cook with less salt? Can that vending machine sell healthy snacks?
Peer pressure
Our biology was not designed for us to sit at computers all day. We need to move about. Does the workplace environment encourage movement, or look at it as an aberration? Is there space to stretch? Is there any way of allowing employees some physical vigor during the work day? If no one previously exercised at work, then those that do will seem eccentric. Workplace wellness professionals must advocate for physical movement because peer pressure matters.
Fortunately, there are exercises designed for computer users. The University of Medicine & Dentistry of New Jersey and the University of Oklahoma (OU) have licensed Easy Desktop Yoga, a workplace-wellness product, allowing employees to workout at their desks. OU ran a pilot before expanding the program.
Exercise is gaining acceptance in the workplace. It hasn’t replaced caffeine yet, but this, like all changes, will happen gradually. The advantage to Easy Desktop Yoga is that it is easy. Making a small change is far more likely to lead to long-term habit change than grandiose plans.
Let’s make it easy.
