That’s all a bit Stockholm Syndrome.
Sure, make your company your identity when it’s your company - i.e. you built it and have at least a say on were it goes to - but otherwise you’re just getting attached to something were you have little real power and others tell you what to do to serve their ideas and their interests, not yours.
Frankly the only type of situation were I would see it as healthy to become so entwinned with a company is when it’s a tiny thing were you are indeed an irreplaceable member and have a genuine say over at least some of it, and that’s not going to be the case with a behemoth as Google were “you’re a valued employee” is something that comes on e-mails starting with “dear sir/madam”.
Mind you, I’ve been involved in Tech and Startups on and off since the 90s and the whole “getting employes to bind their identity with the company so that you can make them sacrifice themselves for the company” has been a purposeful strategy used by Tech companies (Google standing out by being unusually heavy users of that HR technique), all the way since the original Internet boom.
(It’s a bit like what’s done in the Military all over the World, but at least in those the Greater Cause is supposedly one’s nation, whilst here the Greater Cause is delivering more profits to some individuals who don’t give a rats ass about you)
Having your identity entwinned with your profession itself is understandable, but having it entwinned with a specific employee for whom you’re but a “human resource” is incredibly naive and not at all healthy.
Cannacheques@slrpnk.net 11 months ago
I disagree with your notion that a person is not or cannot love an abstract entity however I do not care enough to explain or elaborate in this comment, feel free to enquire if you’re curious
jaybone@lemmy.world 11 months ago
I love this response.