Work That Works for You
By Judy Okolo
What if your career is the very thing silently draining you – not because it is stressful, but because it is misaligned?
Alignment is the new productivity. And a career without alignment is simply a beautifully decorated cage.

When your work contradicts your values, the body registers it before the mind does. You’ll feel it as Sunday-night anxiety.
You’ll sense it in the tightness in your chest on Monday morning. You’ll notice it in the growing resentment every time your calendar dictates your life.
Misalignment shows up as chronic stress, inflammation, disengagement, and a subtle erosion of purpose. Even the most talented professionals lose their shine when their work stops nourishing their identity.
When your work is aligned:
You think more clearly.
You make decisions faster.
Your energy becomes sustainable, not seasonal.
You perform without the heaviness of self-betrayal.
You experience a sense of ease that no salary band can buy.
Alignment doesn’t remove hard work; it recalibrates it. You work from your strengths.
How to Create Work That Works for You
- Identify Your Non-Negotiable Values
Not the “CV values” — the real ones. The ones your life collapses without.
Ask yourself:
What do I need in my work in order to feel alive?
What do I refuse to compromise on anymore?
Why am I pretending that something matters to me when it actually doesn’t?
Write down five. Then circle the top two. These two should guide every major career decision going forward. - Audit Your Current Work Life
Look at your role, environment, schedule, and your responsibilities. Which of your values are honoured? Which are violated every week?
Where are you overperforming and underliving?
This audit alone can reveal the real reason behind burnout, resentment or stagnation. - Redesign the Edges Before Redesigning the Entire Canvas
You don’t need to quit your job tomorrow. Start by adjusting the edges:
Negotiate clearer boundaries.
Restructure your workday for your natural energy rhythms.
Delegate tasks that drain you.
Advocate for work that leverages your strengths.
Small shifts create new momentum – and momentum creates options.
You can be successful and still be misaligned.
You can be praised and still be unfulfilled.
You can be productive and still be slowly disconnecting from yourself.
But you don’t have to stay there. Your career should not just pay you. It should also ground you, stretch you, and reflect you.
The most powerful version of success is the one that does not require you to abandon yourself.
In 2026, let your work be your ally – not your antagonist. Align your career with your values, and you won’t just work better; you’ll live better.
Until next time, let’s glow intentionally.
















