This week’s Hufflepuff leadership topic is what to do when you need to get away from people–either because you need to work on stuff or because you’re an introvert and being around people (even though you love them) exhausts you. When asked how they create alone time and space, my two contacts at Hogwarts* had similar answers. Muggle studies teacher and Hufflepuff alumna Becky Weasley said, “Well, it helps that I’m married to the Hogwarts gamekeeper. Charlie and I have our own cabin a little ways away from the castle. When I have a lot of grading to do, I work on it at home instead of in my office. But when I really need to get away, I pack a picnic and conveniently get lost in the Forbidden Forest. Charlie will always come find me eventually.” Her nephew, Patrick, a seventh-year student and Hufflepuff prefect, said, “I like to be available to the first- and second-years when they have questions about school or are just homesick, but sometimes I have to get my own work done, you know? So a lot of times, I’ll go next door to the kitchens and ask the house-elves not to tell anyone I’m there. They usually give me some of whatever they’re cooking. And in return, I help them clean up. Or I’ll go visit my Aunt Becky and Uncle Charlie. They usually feed me too.” So, common themes seem to be 1) food and 2) hiding (like a badger in a burrow?).
But Muggle/No-Maj society presents an additional challenge that our Hogwarts friends don’t have to face: technology. You can hide if you want, but if you have a phone, people can still find you. (Unless you’re in the Forbidden Forest, where I hear that reception is really bad.) Much ink (which here is a metaphor for digital text) has been spilled over the effects that smartphones have had on the American and European work week. Now, our bosses, colleagues, and employees can find us anytime. Some people, like me, avoid using their phones for email, but there’s still texting. One curious consequence of this constant connectivity is a comparison game over who’s the busiest. I’ve heard people in my organization brag about how many emails they get over the weekend. “My boss starts emailing me Sunday night around sundown, and I can’t wait until Monday morning to respond to them [implied: because I’m too important to the company].” I’m not saying this is any one person’s fault. What we have not only in my organization but in our society at large is a culture of busyness. And it’s not healthy.
Some Hufflepuff leaders (okay, I just made an assumption there) at an organization called Reboot have started an annual event called National Day of Unplugging. I participated last year, and I’ve been looking forward to the 2018 event for months. It’s simple: From sundown this Friday to sundown this Saturday, you keep your phone and other digital devices off. (The resemblance to Sabbath is not an accident–Reboot is a Jewish organization.) Of course, that’s if you want to be extreme (which I do). Maybe for you, unplugging simply means you don’t check email or Instagram for that 24-hour period. But in any case, you’re engaging in an act of radical freedom and humility–declaring that the digital world (which is not the whole world) can survive without you for 24 hours.
What does this have to do with leadership? First, obviously, leaders themselves need a break. But secondly, unplugging has a trickle-down effect. When I step away from work for a day, I’m letting my employees and students know that it’s okay for them to do the same.
Will you be participating in the National Day of Unplugging? Do you have other suggestions on this topic? Let me know in the comments!
*These characters are both my own creations–see last week’s post.