Posted on 10. Nov, 2005 by Brian Reid in General

Ironically, today’s post is about work-life balance. This is ironic, naturally, because I have had very little balance of late. Those of you who know my dirty little secret (my job), probably also know that, from time to time, I becoming singularly unable to jam everything into the 24 hours I’m allotted.

But I am not alone in my quest. The Gen Y folks who are nipping at my demographic heels (I’m a young Xer) are apparently changing
the rules of the workplace
, including work-life balance:

Work-life balance isn’t just a buzz word. Unlike boomers who tend to put a high priority on career, today’s youngest workers are more interested in making their jobs accommodate their family and personal lives. They want jobs with flexibility, telecommuting options and the ability to go part time or leave the workforce temporarily when children are in the picture.

“There’s a higher value on self fulfillment,” says Diana San Diego, 24, who lives with her parents in San Francisco and works on college campuses helping prepare students for the working world through the Parachute College Program. “After 9/11, there is a realization that life is short. You value it more.”

While this is good news (if it’s true, which Slate correctly points out is hardly a given), I’m not sure we should be quoting 24-year-olds who live with their parents as paragons of deep thinking on work-life balance. Surely, USA Today could have found a 24-year-old first-time parent in America negotiating a flex schedule or exploring at-home fatherhood or shared care. Heck, I bet one of you fits the bill.

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  1. Elton

    14. Nov, 2005

    Completely agree. I’m an X-er turning 33 this month and work-life balance is terribly difficult to obtain. One reason my Wife and I started our own online baby boutique (www.polkadotwhale.com) is to help ourselves and the brands we carry be able to work from home and be with our families. Cheers,

    Elton

  2. Jerry

    15. Nov, 2005

    I liked your comments on the person USA Today interviewed. They should have interviewed my wife and I, as we are first time parents sharing care of our son and I am pretty much a stay at home dad (I work on the weekends and my wife is a grad student). We have definitely discovered what it means to balance! I still can’t figure out what we did with all that free time before the kid arrived!

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