eleventh Tuesday let’s talk about our culture
Culture is the way you do thing around here.
That's the simplest definition I have ever heard. I’ve enjoyed my job because I've gotten to work with people from Japan, from Australia, Thailand, Malaysia, France, England, Scotland, Korea, India and many countries.
They help me to appreciate the way they work. For example, Japanese is hardworking, polite and put the best quality of work no matter what they do. Australians are funny, love life and make things happen. They work as a team like a baseball team.
Every day, I go to work and there are two outcomes: create an environment where everyone works to support each other, or pull everyone down the drain by complaining and backstabbing.
I believe that if I am positive, there is one less person to make the workplace a misery. Similarly, at home, I will make an effort to keep arguments at bay.
I often ask myself, who do I want to be? Your friendly neighborhood spiderman or nasty, cold-blooded sucker?
What parent will I see myself being? A slave-driving parent with high expectations that the child must meet 98 out of 100 or more or a go-to parent when the child is struggling in school.
There are many imperfections in me. Fortunately, i am not too fat (because I make an effort to exercise), not too ignorant (because I listen to Ted talks and read some books) and not too ugly (thanks to my parents). What I can really change is my behavior like making people feel comfortable around me. I have also attempted to stop judging people after I read the books written by Brene Brown and empathize with people around me.
Stoic philosophy states that I am the only person able to control my thoughts, not my mom or my dad. When I am born, I come with nothing on me but a body and a working brain (Operating system). I may not be able to control my environment fully but at least, I am able to make it better.
If you are in a leadership position, Simon Senek sums up pretty much this quote.
That's the simplest definition I have ever heard. I’ve enjoyed my job because I've gotten to work with people from Japan, from Australia, Thailand, Malaysia, France, England, Scotland, Korea, India and many countries.
They help me to appreciate the way they work. For example, Japanese is hardworking, polite and put the best quality of work no matter what they do. Australians are funny, love life and make things happen. They work as a team like a baseball team.
Every day, I go to work and there are two outcomes: create an environment where everyone works to support each other, or pull everyone down the drain by complaining and backstabbing.
I believe that if I am positive, there is one less person to make the workplace a misery. Similarly, at home, I will make an effort to keep arguments at bay.
I often ask myself, who do I want to be? Your friendly neighborhood spiderman or nasty, cold-blooded sucker?
What parent will I see myself being? A slave-driving parent with high expectations that the child must meet 98 out of 100 or more or a go-to parent when the child is struggling in school.
There are many imperfections in me. Fortunately, i am not too fat (because I make an effort to exercise), not too ignorant (because I listen to Ted talks and read some books) and not too ugly (thanks to my parents). What I can really change is my behavior like making people feel comfortable around me. I have also attempted to stop judging people after I read the books written by Brene Brown and empathize with people around me.
Stoic philosophy states that I am the only person able to control my thoughts, not my mom or my dad. When I am born, I come with nothing on me but a body and a working brain (Operating system). I may not be able to control my environment fully but at least, I am able to make it better.
If you are in a leadership position, Simon Senek sums up pretty much this quote.
”The role of a leader is not to come up with all the great ideas. The role of a leader is to create an environment in which great ideas can happen.”
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