By Kenzie Koehle
A hot topic that has popped up in the last year or two has been that of a work-life balance. For many employees who now work from home in a space where their workplace and safe space have blended into one, they wonder how they can keep these two halves of themselvesâtheir work life and their normal lifeâbalanced.
Niko Pfund, the president and academic publisher at Oxford University Press, is of the opinion that you shouldnât settle for a work-life balance, but instead obtain a work-life integration. A balance is certainly not a bad thing to have, but it shouldnât be the end-all goal of a career. Pfund says, âI think there are professions where the gift of leading an integrated existence offers itself up. I think that that is the best of all possible worlds.â He acknowledges that this integration it might not work for every job; but if itâs possible, this should be something all strive for, as it will lead to a healthy marriage of the two halves of a personâs life. And by accepting both sides, they wonât need an unhappy âbreakâ from each other.
He acknowledges that there will be times you need to reflect and make sure one half isnât overstepping the other. For example, if he is invited to do something with an author heâs become friends with, Pfund will ask himself, âis this going to have any bearing on the next book I work on?â He suggests that you donât close yourself off to growing connections, but to simply be careful that the integration doesnât become confused to the point that itâs unprofessional.
Though Pfund has worked for the University Oxford Press for more than twenty years, he believes that part of finding the right job is trying many different paths. He says, âI think thereâs real utility in doing work at a young age that you ultimately realize is work you donât want to do.â If you try a couple of things (whether thatâs construction, temp jobs, or serving at Chuck-E-Cheese), youâll find what you may like about a job and make sure to look for it in a future career. But most importantly, you may find yourself working at a mouse-themed restaurant and realize that you want nothing to do with this in your future, meaning youâll work extra hard to find something you do like insteadâas was the case with Pfund.
Finally, when asked what his definition of success is, Pfund didnât reply in monetary or professional units of measurement. Rather, his definition of success is happiness: âThe happiest people I know are people who have lasting, meaningful relationships with other people and are also members of a number of communities.â Â He quotes Robert Frost, saying, ââHome is the place where, when you have to go there, they have to take you in.â I think that if you have a number of places like thatâand it doesnât have to be a physical place; it can be a relationship, it can be a frame of mind even. I think those are the things that help define what I would consider a life well lead, a successful life.â