Amplying empathy in the work place by guiding humans on how to talk to other humans affected by cancer. Author. CancerWidow Bad Joke Teller. Joy spreader.
When my husband died from cancer, I became a crazier parent to our kids who were 12, 9, and 7. The ramifications of death from cancer are vast not just for families but for employees and teams who work with the person affected by cancer. Listen here https://t.co/6Sb5GvHdyl
I’ve been talking a lot about the cancer fairytale and how dangerous it is to managers, teams and employees affected by cancer. Here is a great post from IG that sums up the fairytale vs the reality. @ThanksCancer always calling it like it is!
Cancer always deserves humor. Send this to your co-worker who you know has lung issues due to their cancer. Hopefully, it won't make the cough with laughter.
Why We Say No to Help. You know you need help but when someone offers, your instinct is to say "No thank you." It could receiver's guilt. It's a thing! https://t.co/ngnZNPTQco via @LinkedIn#HR#EmployeeExperience#EmployeeAppreciationDay
Sometimes as a manager, we have thoughts that aren't so nice! And when your employee tells you they have cancer that can be one of those times. But, sometimes a not nice thought can lead to good thought.
https://t.co/iLs17oJQuL
#managing#managementskills#cancerandwork
Such a great reminder for those who have friends with cancer. If your looking for accolades for helping, you are going to be disappointed.
Expectations of another are resentments in the making.
Great thoughts by Seth Godin. I cant think of anyone who is sad to see 2020 but I hope as we escape into 2021 we value and USE the beautiful lessons we learned in 2020. They are what will@make 2021 amazing. https://t.co/4aJNPQ7LQl
I'm in the running to win a Flige Suspension Kit, thanks to @Ptfamous ! I love watching them. They are funny and serious --- a hard balance to pull off. Thanks @PtFamous