Human Work
Makes For Happy Workers
By Eileen
McDargh
It started at the rental
car turn-in location. My friend is a "platinum" member with
Hertz-who offers a great benefit I discovered when the rental
agencies are a considerable distance from the terminal. Hertz
provided a shuttle bus to the lot for people to pick out their
cars. Our shuttle bus driver grinned as she slid into the driver's
seat and said she could hardly wait for school to begin. Turns out
she's also a school bus driver and with her seniority, she gets to
pick her route. Her passion: autistic children. "I just love 'em,"
she grinned. "I get them again this year."
Fascinating. Sincere. And difficult:
We stopped to grab a bite of lunch
before long flights. The waitress excitedly nodded when we ordered
the cashew chicken sandwich. "It's our new menu. We just got it
yesterday. That's a great choice!" She grinned and gave us a
two-thumbs up signal. I don't know about you, but I rarely get
service help excited by a menu. It was as if she personally made
the sandwich.
Fascinating. Sincere. And standing on your feet all day-difficult:
At an adjacent Frontier airlines gate, I asked where my plane was
and how come no representative was at the gate. "Listen," she
laughed, "it's also my gate. I can do amazing things. Watch how
quick I get this plane loaded. I'll do the same for yours. You'll
see."
I did. It's almost 6 pm on
a Sunday night and folks are cranky and tired. Not my gate
attendant. True to her word, she efficiently started the process and
took time to actually read every boarding pass and call the
passenger by name. She patted my arm when I went through. "See,
Eileen. Told you I could do this."
Fascinating. Sincere. And the job of a gate agent is difficult-very
difficult:
My seatmate was a young man, a rotating guidance counselor for
grades 6-12 in the Costa Mesa, CA school district. "There aren't
many men in my line of work-and particularly men of color," he
remarked offhandedly. "Do you like what you do?" I asked. His eyes
opened wide and he offered a wide smile. "I love it. I really feel
like I am making a difference. So many of these kids have no one to
talk to-no one to model the right behavior." He proceeded to tell
me a series of stories that would break your heart. "It's when they
come back after they leave school that is most rewarding. You just
never know if what you say today will suddenly click in years
later."
Fascinating. Sincere. And difficult-very, very difficult:
In each instance,
the joy came from how each connected with another human being. It
was the connection that made the difference. Not the money. Not the
title. The eyes staring at each other. The hands reaching out to
help.
Fascinating. Sincere. And
maybe-with deliberate intent we could try it. Might not be all that
difficult.
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Eileen McDargh.
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