Can we be compassionate in 2018?

Published on
Written by
Byrne Dean
No items found.
Share

Noses back to the grindstone...seemingly interminably wet commutes of 2018 have begun...

How do you feel about returning to work? Excited? Sad? Anxious? Anti-climatic? How do the people you work with feel? Is anyone suffering? It's a strong word. The harassment revelations of 2017 taught us that we need to care more about it. People may be suffering silently alongside you.  

A daily act of compassion or kindness could make a big difference. I reckon it's worth adding to the list of New Years resolutions. I've given up on the low carb diet already.  This one feels more important.

In his new year message, Justin Welby said attacks in London and Manchester, and the Grenfell Tower fire, were met with heroism from the emergency teams.He also used his message to ask whether the darkness or light of human kindness would define the year ahead.He was speaking from London Ambulance Service headquarters in Waterloo.The Anglican leader recalled the desperation and sorrow he felt when he visited Grenfell Tower in west London as it burned.He also highlighted the plight of people who were "struggling to find work or relying on food banks" and those who were bereaved, or coping with poor mental health or physical illness."When things feel unrelentingly difficult, there are often questions which hang in the air: Is there any light at all? Does anyone care?" he said.

Related Articles

Who gets "second chair"?

"I think I may have messed up!"  So said a partner in a global law firm in a recent Inclusive Leadership session I was facilitating. We'd been talking a...

Trust and Kindness in the Workplace

Most people have worked in a negative workplace at some stage in their careers, a workplace where people immediately see the worst in any scenario and w...

Who would you tell? Finding a workplace ally when something’s not right

In the months following #metoo many employers have done a lot of great work to address potential harassment risk in the workplace - embedding clear poli...

Personnel Today: BBC to ‘act immediately’ on workplace culture review

Ellie Herriot shares her insights with Personnel Today on how tackling everyday poor behaviour is key to preventing workplace scandals.