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                    		| Tom Petersen works at a company in the Midwest, where  he processes e-mail, attends meetings and recalibrates management expectations.  His book of essays on work and faith is currently lurking outside of  publishers’ back doors, trying to meet a naïve editor. Contact him at www.HisWorkInProgress.com.  |  
                    		|  |  |  His work in progress   Failing to Meet My Expectations 
 CBNMoney.com 
		  
		My coworker Joe had to have a  difficult conversation with me recently. He had to call me on the carpet for my  bad behavior. 
		 In a rare moment of self-discipline  long ago, I asked my colleague Joe, a Christian, to hold me accountable when he  sees me do something that isn’t contributing to my goal of being the greatest  apostle since Paul. (His first task was to explain the difference between my  definition of “greatest” and God’s.)  Since that time, Joe has gently  nudged me toward truth and light. But he’s apparently tiring under the strain  of keeping me in line, because this time he didn’t pull any punches. He said  that my criticism of a colleague during a department meeting was not only a  poor Christian witness, but probably sabotaged my career. To add insult to my  own self-inflicted injury, he said I seem to have a sense of entitlement. “You act like the world owes you  something,” Joe said, his arms crossed, brow furrowed and head shaking as only  a true friend can do. “It’s kind of a lousy way to share your faith.”  What Joe has going for him in  wisdom he lacks in tact. Expecting Easy OutcomesBut after I recovered from the  veracity of Joe’s brotherly accountability, I thought about his words. He had a  point. Somewhere along the line, I have developed a sense of entitlement about  work. I have come to expect that things will go my way; that I somehow deserve  pleasant outcomes and freedom from any kind of harm, setback or even  inconvenience. Joe characterized that as an expectations problem. Understanding  ExpectationsI think we all go into work with  some expectation of how our day will go. And even when we say we expect the  worse, I think that deep down, we think that things should always go our way.  And sometimes they do. But when work meets my expectations, I’m usually not  even paying attention. After all, that was what I expected! But when things  don’t go as I expect, that’s when I get fussy. Calculating the ExpectationsBeginning to realize the extent of  my expectations problem, I started listing them out. I was amazed once I  realized how many unrealistic work expectations I had! And about the only thing  that tied them together was the consistent belief that only good things should  happen to me. Expectations of PeopleMy greatest  expectation of people is that they will act in my best interests. I expect my  boss to consistently praise my work, my co-workers to drop what they’re doing  to help me, and the IT Help Desk person to personally come re-boot my computer  when I call. Needless to say, those expectations are seldom met. Apparently  other people think I should put their needs ahead of mine. (People! Listen up!  That defeats my whole purpose!) Expectations of RewardsThe longer I work,  I’m embarrassed to say, the more I think I should be compensated for my work.  After all, I bring great longevity and wisdom to my employer the longer I am  here. If nothing else, they should pay me more just to keep my mouth shut about  the location of the files detailing past company failures (which isn’t hard,  since I’ve played a part in most of them. Which also might explain why my  expectation of rewards goes unmet…)  Expectations of EaseI have been a  productive member of the work world (if you don’t get too technical about the  definition of “productive”) for more than 20 years. After all that time, I  subconsciously think that work should start getting easier. But like the stock  prospectus says, “past performance is no guarantee of future returns.” Or, as  one of my co-workers says, “If it was easy, they’d hire monkeys to do it.” I  think he meant it as an encouragement. Expectations of UnityNowhere in my  employee handbook does it say that we are a company free of conflict, where  everyone gets along and peace reigns. Yet I seem to think that every meeting  should produce only mutual respect and common vision, and maybe even some  tangible demonstration of teamwork (like a tree house, maybe, or a quilt).  Imagine my disappointment when the only outcome of a meeting is another  meeting, scheduled specifically when certain people can’t attend, because  they’re not team players, you know. God made us all different – why am I  surprised when we act differently? Expectations of FairnessMy expectation  that everyone (particularly “me”) will be treated equally and fairly crashes  into reality quite a bit.  One of my favorite  lines from the movie “Lion King” occurs when the mean lion Scar says, in that  Jeremy Irons accent of his, “Life’s not fair.” I loved saying it to my kids as  they encountered the bumps and bruises of life. I was helping toughen them up,  I thought. So I was quite displeased when my son first said it to me, in  response to my whining about some petty issue at work. Kids today are so  insolent.
 I take some solace  knowing that this expectation dates all the way back to Eve. Her sense of  inequity that God had disqualified one tree as a source of sustenance was one  of her motivations for taking the forbidden fruit. What a comfort to know that  if there had been no Adam or Eve, I would still commit original sin!
 Recalibrating my  ExpectationsSo knowing all of this, what’s my  response? I need to recalibrate my expectations, realizing bad things happen to  good people, even when those good people are “me.” Paul doesn’t pull any  punches, either, when he tells the church at Thessalonica, “For indeed when  we were with you, we kept telling you in advance that we were going to suffer  affliction; and so it came to pass, as you know.” I Thessalonians 3:4 (NASB).
 Second, I try to be content with what I have and where I  am. Again, Paul has counsel on the benefit of contentment when he writes, “But  godliness actually is a means of great gain when accompanied by contentment.  For we have brought nothing into the world, so we cannot take anything out of  it either. If we have food and covering, with these we shall be content.” I  Timothy 6:6-8 (NASB). When my expectations are calibrated along those lines,  everything that happens beyond that is gravy! Finally, if that doesn’t work, I  turn to my friend, Joe. He has helped me reset my expectations. He is always  consistent, with his deep sighs and head-shaking in disappointment.What expectations do you have of work that aren’t  realistic? How have you recalibrated your expectations to align with God’s  word? Send Tom an e-mail at tom@tomcpetersen.com   Tom Petersen works at a company in the Midwest, where  he processes e-mail, attends meetings and recalibrates management expectations.  His book of essays on work and faith is currently lurking outside of  publishers’ back doors, trying to meet a naïve editor. Contact him at www.HisWorkInProgress.com.     
 
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