2 responses to “Verunsicherung”

  1. Peter says:

    Dear Beatrice Isler, your experience with the granddaughter is painful. Because I have no grandchildren, I will not have this experience. As a quality management consultant (ISO, eduQua, SODK, IN-Qualis, etc.), I wonder why companies and institutions are not reviewing their work processes right now and adapting them to the new situation. Unfortunately, it is a truism that in a crisis, people tend to fall back on old patterns of behavior, even if they have not proven themselves or are even harmful. In social terms, this probably also means that undesirable developments are now becoming particularly visible and human behaviors such as greed, lust for power and exploitation are being brought to light. I am not known as a pessimist. Nevertheless, I don't believe that individuals, societies and, consequently, companies will use this time for a fundamental rethink. But - hope dies last. You said it - fingers crossed! Unless the granddaughter suddenly comes running after all. Then thumbs up and arms wide apart.
    Peter Woodtli

    • Isler says:

      Dear Peter Woodtli, thank you for your comments, which unfortunately I can only agree with. How I would love to wave goodbye optimistically and euphorically and prove you wrong. And yet: it is actually given to man not to give up, but to carry on and believe in future generations.
      And one thing's for sure: when the little girl comes running again, she gets a huge cuddle!

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