Every job has its perks and its downsides, that’s the nature of the beast. We trade our time, the one thing we can’t ever get back, for what we need to survive.
Some career paths have high end quality perks; good salaries, excellent benefits, prestige, respect and accolades in your field of endeavor, but just as there is always some sort of balance in everything, there is balance in these things also.
Ask a celebrity what the down side is to their fame and they are bound to tell you that it’s the loss of privacy. Ask a professional athlete the downside to their fame and they might tell you that they feel the constant responsibility of being someone’s hero or at the least the pressure to stay in top physical shape so that they can perform.
Sometimes we choose careers that put us in the forefront of an organization, that make us the person that, in a way, personalizes a larger entity. Our job might include a number of different facets but to the public, we symbolize, we put a face on that which is faceless. Hopefully, we are well compensated for that responsibility because it costs us a certain amount of anonymity as well as a loss of privacy. Another thing it most likely costs us is the ability to openly express all of our personal views.
The reason for that is because no matter how much we decry that our views do not reflect the views of the organization we represent, our views hold more sway because the public sees a thick cord of connection between our personal opinion and that of the organization that we represent.
Recently a gentleman named Bernie expressed his support for a particular presidential candidate, he did this publicly in a news conference. Why would some guy named Bernie warrant a news conference? Because he is the president of a prominent university. If he was just a guy on the street, his opinion would mean no more than anyone else’s but he is not just a guy on the street, and that’s why his opinion ended up in the newspaper.
No matter what he prefaces his remarks with, Bernie Machen, almost as much as Albert the Alligator, represents the University of Florida. That is his job and he is well compensated for it. It comes with a number of perks but it also comes with a number of responsibilities. What he says publicly, in a newspaper, reflects on the University of Florida as a whole.
What he says in his living room or even at a party with friends is his own but what he says in a public forum which recognizes him only for his connection to the University of Florida, is an unstated endorsement of a presidential candidate by the University of Florida, no matter what such remarks are prefaced by.
I agree that in this particular circumstance, it sucks to be him but in most of the rest of his job, he has a pretty sweet deal.