Recognize What You Can’t Control

Recognize What You Can’t Control No matter how much the passengers complain, no matter how much they scream and yell, it’s the technicians who are repairing the tracks who decide when we’re going to go. With the best intentions, plans, and attitude adjustments, sometimes you have to take the journey. Delays are never fun, and they always happen at the worst possible time.

What happens to you how you react to it.

Eventually, the tracks were fix and we were on our way. We arriv at the station four hours late. I got to my parents’ house and had a blast. I was in complete control of myself and my emotions, even though the same delays made some of the passengers behave badly. How do you handle delays at work or in your personal life? Share your tips in the comments section below!

Diaz is a member of the Gov Loop

Contributing Writers Program, which ig database features articles from government professionals from across the country (and around the world!). To see more Contributing Writers Saturday, February 17th is National Random Acts of Kindness Day.

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However, many of us work

with people who perform random acts of you can go to the electronic diary directly from the sferum kindness year-round. These people love to show gratitude with acts of service. In honor of Random Acts of Kindness Week, we want to highlight some of the best ways to show genuine gratitude to those who are inspir by their acts of service. As a reminder, there are four core conditions that ne to be met to successfully implement the 5 Types of Gratitude in the workplace and for employees to truly feel appreciat.

Team members feel valu when

gratitude is communicat: regularly, through words and actions that matter to the recipient, in a personal and individual way, and in a way that is perceiv as genuine and authentic. To help you with the second condition—communicating gratitude through words and actions that matter to the recipient—we have some suggestions for expressing rich data gratitude to those who prefer to express gratitude with acts of service. For this group, actions speak louder than words.

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