Tuesday, May 19, 2020

Even on steroids, you have to be nice

Even on steroids, you have to be nice Barry Bonds, the recently crowned home run king (and the less recently crowned king of steroids) was incredibly rude to the press for most of his career, and he is suffering for that now because the crowds are booing and the press is writing only parenthetically about his record-breaking performance. You know the lesson here: You have to treat everyone you meet with respect because you dont know who you are going to need later. The problem is that people use the lesson at work they treat their boss and their underlings well. But they dont treat people they dont work with well. This is such a ubiquitous problem that half of American workers have been psychologically abused at their workplace, according the Handbook on Workplace Violence, a government publication. But the abuse is coming from people outside the workspace, such as clients, customers or, as in Barrys case, third-party people you just have to deal with in order to get your work done. Big-time journalist Patricia Sellers, in a lecture at Yale University, said, The best thing, the smartest thing Ive done is to be nice to assistants and secretaries. I believe you should be nice to everybody. As you rise, you will see the world gets so small. She describes, in fact, what happens to a guy like Bonds. When you are on top of the world, you stand on the part of the mountain that is very small. The number of people you really talk to at the top is small. Its more intense than at the bottom, where theres room for tons of people. Extremely talented people can get to the top while being a jerk, but that doesnt mean theyll be celebrated. After all, the baseball writers are also the Hall of Fame voters.

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