Category Archives: News

Woman Takes Days Off For Mental Health Boss Has Perfect Reply

Woman Takes Days Off For Mental Health Boss Has Perfect Reply

July 11th, 2017

In 2015, she wrote a blog discussing her mental health struggles. It reads:

“I’ve lived with anxiety for as long as I can remember. I was the child who cried during emergency drills at school because my brain actually went into emergency mode… It didn’t really have a big impact on my life until high school when I started experiencing panic attacks. My conditions worsed through college… and by my fourth year I was on prescribed medication and seeing a therapist once a week.”

In late June of this year, Madalyn’s health issues began posing a problem for her once again.

She describes the experience on Twitter.

madalyn@madalynrose

Too distracted by my health (anxious, depressed, injured) to be effective at work.

Too worried about my work to be effective at self care.

30 people are talking about this

Madalyn decides to take a few days off of work to get her mental health under control, emailing her boss to let him know.

2

Source: @madalynrose Twitter

In a response email that has since gone viral, the CEO of Madalyn’s company, Ben Congleton, responds to Madalyn’s message.

The CEO writes, in part, “I just wanted to personally thank you for sending emails like this. Every time you do, I use it as a reminder of the importance of using sick days for mental health.”

4

Source: @madalynrose
ADVERTISEMENT

Ben’s compassionate and understanding response has been liked over 35,000 times, sparking a new online discussion about the stigmatization of mental health in the work place.

Unfortunately, judging from responses like the following, many Americans still do not feel like they can approach their employer regarding mental health issues.

King of Tωitter@TonyNoland

Re LRT if I told my boss I was taking a sick day for mental health, she’d give me no end of hassle. That’s why I call it a “headache”.

See King of Tωitter’s other Tweets

And, although most users seem in favor of mental health sick days, there are definitely a few people who are against the notion as well.

Interestingly, mental health sick days make sense from an economic perspective.

According to Mental Health America, the cost of depression was 600$ per depressed worker in 1995.

Contrary to what may be assumed, most of these costs did not come from treatment, but from absenteeism and lost productivity at work.

CEO Ben responds to the attention his email has received with a blog.

In it, he writes:

“We are in a knowledge economy. Our jobs require us to execute at peak mental performance. When an athlete is injured, they sit on the bench and recover. Let’s get rid of the idea that somehow the brain is different.”

According to Scientific American1 in 6 Americans are medicated for mental health. If you or someone you know is struggling with their mental health, remember that supportsare available.

 

North Korea is Trump’s nuclear Rubik’s Cube

epa05857469 A photograph released by the North Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) shows North Korean leader Kim Jong-un (R) watching the ground jet test of a high-thrust engine at an undisclosed location in North Korea, 19 March 2017. According to media reports on 19 March 2017, North Korea announced a successful test of a high-thrust rocket engine. EPA/KCNA EDITORIAL USE ONLY

EPA/KCNA

A photo released by the North Korean Central News Agency shows North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, at right, watching the ground jet test of a high-thrust engine at an undisclosed location in North Korea on March 19.

Continue reading North Korea is Trump’s nuclear Rubik’s Cube

U.S. and the Middle East: Power politics or amateur hour?

Assessing the interests and weaknesses of the U.S., Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Iran in the Middle East.

U.S. and the Middle East: Power politics or amateur hour?(Credit: AP Photo/Lolita Baldor)

The “Great Game” being played in the Middle East, with Syria and Iraq as the center rings, bears a superficial similarity to the power political maneuverings of the dominant European states in their African and Asian periphery during the 19th century.

There is a somewhat closer resemblance to the Spanish civil war in the mix of multiple local parties, external powers and ideological militancy.

Yet, what we are witnessing today is quite different in some crucial respects — adding to our confusion in trying to make sense of the plot. Complexity and confusion reinforce each other. That is true for the actors themselves.

One gets the distinct impression that most of the leaders involved in this imbroglio don’t know that they’re doing. The obvious exceptions are the Islamic State and al-Qaeda/al-Nusra.

They gain advantage from the others’ flaws, errors and failures, which is contorted by their general flailing about.

Complete Story

Donald Trump is under investigation for ties to Russia. What happens now?

Monday’s intelligence hearing highlighted the ‘big gray cloud’ of suspicion hanging over the White House. Here’s what happened – and what to expect

Watch highlights from Monday’s congressional hearing

Spencer Ackerman in New York
Wednesday 22 March 2017 07.31 GMT

 

A presidency under open-ended investigation for its ties to Russia. A director of the FBI, himself key in aiding the president’s election, not only confirming that inquiry but refuting the president’s claim of illegal surveillance by his predecessor.

The first open hearing into Donald Trump’s alleged Russia connections on Monday ensured that the US president will operate under a cloud of suspicion until either the various inquiries deliver credible public conclusions or Trump leaves office, whichever comes first.

Testimony from the FBI director, James Comey, indicated that for Trump, the allegations are no weather pattern, lasting for a finite time, but rather the climate for his presidency – what the House intelligence committee chairman, Devin Nunes, a Republican who was also a Trump transition official, angrily called a “big gray cloud”.

Here are critical questions for understanding that climate.

Where do the inquiries go next?

The next big calendar date for the public hearings is 28 March, when two Obama-era intelligence officials, the ex-director of national intelligence James Clapper and the ex-CIA director John Brennan, will appear before the House panel.

Complete Story

 

At a glance: The legal dispute over release of Trump’s taxes

Jonathan Lemire, The Associated Press
Published Wednesday, March 15, 2017

NEW YORK — The release of two pages of U.S. President Donald Trump’s 2005 tax returns has sparked a legal dispute, with the White House and a major television network squaring off over whether a law was broken.

The White House said MSNBC’s publication of the pages Tuesday night violated a federal law that prohibits the unauthorized release of tax returns. But the cable network, which revealed the 1040 form on Rachel Maddow’s show, claimed First Amendment privilege.

Trump refused to release his returns during the campaign, breaking a decades-long tradition.

The document revealed Tuesday showed Trump made more than

Continue reading At a glance: The legal dispute over release of Trump’s taxes

Maine Voices: Republican Party has lost its way

The party’s current pro-life stance boils down to a religious disagreement that conservatives should avoid.

BY RICHARD BEDARDSPECIAL TO THE TELEGRAM

COLUMBIA FALLS — What thoughts should an elderly, agnostic Republican share with others in regard to the state of the party of his grandfather, when the party leadership seems comfortable with alternative facts and doublespeak?

Elderly I am; agnostic in all things, religious and political, and I did register as a Republican. So, why all the confusion in recent years, which has only gotten worse in the past several months?

It is impossible to again have a youthful mind with limited knowledge and experience, unless one seriously considers a lobotomy. Therefore, we are destined to become older, and hopefully a teeny bit wiser.

One knows everything at the age of 17, upon graduating from high school with honors and scholarships, then suddenly discovers in, say, five-year increments, that there is so much more to learn.

After many such increments, the awareness grows that one knows so, so little, and that the best state of mind is being agnostic in nearly everything, if one is ever to have peace of mind.

The only other label that one could change is to leave the Republican Party and again become independent, or join another party. Or stay in the party and try to contribute to an image that we could all again be proud of. Silence is not what makes a democracy healthy and strong!

For example: Why am I left with the feeling that the abortion issue seems to almost boil down to a religious issue, one that our party should stay out of – no matter what religion is currently involved? The soft-speaking, elderly lady on the other end of the phone conversation asked if I was “pro-life.” My response was: “I most certainly am, and I have never met anyone during my lifetime who was not pro-life.”

I followed by saying, “If this call is for the purpose of raising money to increase education for women so that they may be better informed to help them prevent an unwanted pregnancy, then count me in.” After a long silence, she again spoke in a kind, soft voice and said, “Thank you,” before hanging up the phone.

Complete Story

Kellyanne Conway’s “triple standard”: A game of two half-truths and a lie

The Trump mouthpiece’s newest catchphrase tries to paint conservative women as victims of the feminist left

Kellyanne Conway’s "triple standard": A game of two half-truths and a lieEnlarge(Credit: Getty/Brendan Smialowski/Bryan R. Smith/ Chip Somodevilla/Salon/Mireia Triguero Roura)

Last weekend, Kellyanne Conway sat down with “CBS This Morning” for an in-depth one-on-one interview designed to make the political operative described by Samantha Bee as President Donald Trump’s “omnipresent spokes-cobra” seem less of a sentient Two Truths and a Lie drinking game and more like an actual human. In this interview, Conway appeared to be testing the waters for a new Kellyanne Katchphrase™ when she claimed that she and other conservative women are subject to “a triple standard” by the media, specifically “traditional feminist outlets.”

“We are constantly going back to where I sat, the presumptive negativity of what I wore, or what I said, and I do think it’s a triple standard,” Conway told correspondent Norah O’Donnell. “People talk about a double standard of what a woman wore or said, but the triple standard is that conservative women are cast aside many times by traditional feminist outlets and individuals who control most of the media.”

Complete Story

Trump supporters in the heartland fear being left behind by GOP health plan

Republican proposal would upend a healthcare system in Indiana that covers many low-income people – in a program that Mike Pence put in place

Pam Martin flips through a binder of healthcare papers for the disabled brother she takes care of.

Pam Martin flips through a binder of healthcare papers for the disabled brother she takes care of. Photograph: Justin Gilliland for the Guardian

Janice Phelps, a 60-year-old disabled factory worker in Evansville,Indiana, knows how expensive healthcare is.

Each month, shots for her severe asthma cost $3,000. Quarterly injections for knee pain cost $3,200. Medication for depression costs $900. She has had seven back surgeries, two shoulder surgeries, and two knee surgeries since 1985. The largest public health programs in America – Medicaid and Medicare, which aid the poor and the elderly – paid for nearly all of it.

Yet, those programs are now threatened by the men she voted for: Donald Trump and former Indiana governor Mike Pence.

Complete Story

Pace of new home construction picks up in February, especially in Ontario: CMHC

Housing starts

(File photo)

The Canadian Press – Published Wednesday, March 8, 2017

OTTAWA — The federal housing agency says the pace of new home construction picked up last month, with a lot of the push coming from Ontario.

Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. says February’s seasonally adjusted rate for housing starts was 210,207 units, up from 208,934 in January.

CMHC says activity in the multi-unit sector actually fell but there was a big jump in single, detached homes in urban areas.

There were 71,871 single detached houses started in February in urban areas — up 12.1 per cent from the prior month — mostly because of Ontario, where there has been a shortage in the Toronto area.

Multiple-unit projects such as condos and apartments in urban areas fell by 4.7 per cent to 121,164 units in February.
Article Source

 

 

Canada fourth-quarter labor productivity rises by 0.4 percent; more hours worked

Wed Mar 8, 2017 8:53am EST

Workers piece together outerwear on the manufacturing floor of Canada Goose's facility in Toronto January 17, 2012. REUTERS/Fred Thornhill
OTTAWA (Reuters) – The labor productivity of Canadian businesses rose 0.4 percent in the fourth quarter as the number of hours worked edged up after two consecutive declines, Statistics Canada said on Wednesday.

 

Third-quarter productivity had jumped by 1.2 percent as the economy recovered from the effects of a major wildfire in the energy-producing province of Alberta.

Real gross domestic product of businesses rose by 0.7 percent in the fourth quarter after increasing by 1.1 percent in the third quarter, pushed up by activity in the mining, quarrying, and oil and gas extraction sector.

The number of hours worked on production in the business sector rose by 0.4 percent, largely due to gains in finance and insurance, professional services and administrative services.

Overall labor costs per unit of production rose by 0.7 percent as the average pay per hour worked climbed by 1.0 percent.

(Reporting by David Ljunggren; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn)

Article Source