Townhall
Start of Something New
Jackie
Gingrich Cushman
Aug
22, 2013
Last
week, our two children started back to school. The prep work
included buying new backpacks, books and school supplies, along with a
few new
clothes. Binders were labeled and organized, new textbooks were bought
and
thumbed through, and, for our daughter Maggie, the first day's outfit
was
carefully thought through and laid out the night before. Schedules were
printed
and reviewed. They were ready to get back to work.
They
were ready for a new year, a fresh start.
As
they walked out our door the first morning, my husband Jimmy
and I reminded them that first impressions matter and to make sure that
they
made good ones. To listen, to pay attention and to learn.
As
the daughter of two teachers, my life has revolved for decades
around the academic calendar. First theirs, then mine, now my
children's. Fall
for me is not just when leaves fall and the air is crisp, but also when
there
is the hint of possibility and potential that a new school year brings.
It's
the chance to learn, to change, to grow and to finish the year a bit
smarter
and more accomplished than when you started.
Oh,
how I miss those relatively easy days. When a teacher's
syllabus was handed out on the first day, and the grading system was
laid out
in black and white.
Real
life is not so easy. There are often no clear delineations
between years or even projects. How do people know if they are making
progress?
For politicians, the way to keep track is by winning elections, and in
off
years, looking at approval ratings.
According
to a poll conducted this month by Gallup, for every
person who approves of Congress, nearly six times as many disapprove.
Just
imagine if 14 percent of your clients approved of your work and 81
percent
disapproved -- what would that mean for you? Probably a hard look in
the mirror
and a plan of action to reach out to your clients, to listen, to plan
and to
accomplish shared objectives.
President
Barack Obama's approval rating for August, according to
Gallup, was down 3 points to 44 percent. "The economy carries the
greatest
weight of nine key issues in determining how Americans rate President
Barack
Obama overall," Gallup noted. "Americans who approve of the job Obama
is doing on the economy are six times more likely to approve of Obama's
overall
performance than those who disapprove of Obama's handling of the
economy."
This
key finding points to a potential weakness and an opportunity
for his opponents. His "approval rating for handling the economy is 35
percent," one of the areas that he is weakest. Obama scored lowest of
the
nine on the federal budget deficit (26 percent approval)...
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