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My recent Friday Thoughts article on Linkedin.
The past few weeks have deepened an anxiety that already weighs heavily on so many of us. War. Rising prices. Relentless layoffs. Job applications met with silence.
In my post-retirement life of volunteering and coaching, here is what I am seeing and hearing every day:
I recently wrote about the need for empathy in the face of layoffs. One person commented — laid off people don’t need empathy, they need to find a job. That response, I think, proved my point perfectly. There is an old saying that stays with me: I complained I had no shoes, until I met a man with no feet.
To everyone who is worried and anxious — Let me open a window for you. Consider this my open window. Reach out. Ask for help. You are not alone, and you are not a burden.
To everyone who is fortunate enough to have food, shelter, and stability right now — remember, circumstances change for all of us. While yours are good, look around. A small act can change someone’s trajectory — a warm introduction, a referral, a five-minute conversation.
I am happy to pick up the phone and talk. Reach out and let me know how I can help.
And to everyone reading this — please, keep your window open too.
Let’s return to believing in the power of community, and in each other.
#Life #Motivation #Help #Coaching
Thanks for your article – I wholeheartedly agree that being open and empathic is a good way to live.
At 52 I recently had to find a new role. I felt pretty confident about my place in the world – a pretty broad range of experience, lots of success that I could point to, good references. But I sent out so many applications, and got almost no results. It was humbling and a bit scary. Fortunately I ended up in a really good role via some personal connections. But this was pretty lucky, and I could have been out of the workforce for considerably longer.
We are fortunate to have enough of a financial buffer to make it through that period, but for many it would be brought them to the financial brink, escalating the stress and worry.