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Sick systems, Or How To Keep An Employee Forever
Tapati
post Jul 12 2010, 10:58 PM
Post #1


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This excellent blog post is making the rounds because the writer has done a great job of describing the dynamics of a dysfunctional workplace or interpersonal relationship.

How To Keep Someone With You Forever

It applies equally well to sick communal or religious systems, of course.

Excerpt:

So you want to keep your lover or your employee close. Bound to you, even. You have a few options. You could be the best lover they've ever had, kind, charming, thoughtful, competent, witty, and a tiger in bed. You could be the best workplace they've ever had, with challenging work, rewards for talent, initiative, and professional development, an excellent work/life balance, and good pay. But both of those options demand a lot from you. Besides, your lover (or employee) will stay only as long as she wants to under those systems, and you want to keep her even when she doesn't want to stay. How do you pin her to your side, irrevocably, permanently, and perfectly legally?

You create a sick system.

A sick system has four basic rules:

Rule 1: Keep them too busy to think. Thinking is dangerous. If people can stop and think about their situation logically, they might realize how crazy things are.

Rule 2: Keep them tired. Exhaustion is the perfect defense against any good thinking that might slip through. Fixing the system requires change, and change requires effort, and effort requires energy that just isn't there. No energy, and your lover's dangerous epiphany is converted into nothing but a couple of boring fights.

This is also a corollary to keeping them too busy to think. Of course you can't turn off anyone's thought processes completely—but you can keep them too tired to do any original thinking. The decision center in the brain tires out just like a muscle, and when it's exhausted, people start making certain predictable types of logic mistakes. Found a system based on those mistakes, and you're golden.

Rule 3: Keep them emotionally involved. Make them love you if you can, or if you're a company, foster a company culture of extreme loyalty. Otherwise, tie their success to yours, so if you do well, they do well, and if you fail, they fail. If you're working in an industry where failure isn't a possibility (the government, utilities), establish a status system where workers do better or worse based on seniority. (This also works in bad relationships if you're polyamorous.)


There's much, much more, please check out the link!

Regarding interpersonal dynamics, someone added the following link in comments to the above post and the author edited to add the link:

On Interpersonal Badness

Great quote:


If somebody is putting in the work to knock you down, it’s because they’ve got something to fear about you if you’re standing up.


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"We have fallen into the place where everything is music." --Rumi

he said change the channel/i've got problems of my own/i'm so sick of hearing about drugs/and aids/and people without homes/and i said, well,/i'd like to sympathize with that/but if you/don't understand/then how can you act

--Ani DiFranco

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Posts in this topic
- Tapati   Sick systems   Jul 12 2010, 10:58 PM
- - metamorphosis   Ouch, i feel sick   Jul 13 2010, 01:12 AM
- - Dhyana   Great article, thank you for posting it, Tapati...   Jul 13 2010, 06:31 PM
|- - Tapati   QUOTE (Dhyana @ Jul 13 2010, 11:31 AM) Gr...   Jul 31 2010, 12:00 AM
- - ras   What if all these systems made it known they were ...   Jul 14 2010, 10:46 PM


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