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Water Cooler Wisdom

Is Showing Sympathy Outdated?

A few months ago, I wrote about the possibility that chivalry was dead in the modern world.  Recently, though, I’ve wondered if some types of consideration might be dead too.  Here’s where this is coming from.  In early November, my mother and my husband’s grandmother passed away in the span of a week.  Small memorial services were held for both, but after that I noticed a stark contrast in the way people reacted to me and my father-in-law as mourners.

 

I’ve heard before that Generations X and Y do everything – including sympathy – via the Web.  Even as a member of late Gen X, though, this seemed weird to me.  I was always taught that if someone you know decently well is in mourning, you send a snail mail card, flowers, or a donation, and you call at least once to see how they are doing.  The number of personal friends and business associates in my circle who knew of my mother’s death but did none of these things was pretty astounding.  Some people sent e-mails, and I guess they figured that was enough. 

 

Meanwhile, my father-in-law and his sister were busy writing 150 thank you notes to the vast number of people who visited with food, ran errands, and called repeatedly to check in while they mourned the death of their mother.  Did the fact that they are members of a different generation, where surrounding your friend or family member who has suffered a loss with comfort and support is considered a priority, have anything to do with it?  I believe that it did.

 

Generation X, and Generation Y even more so, have a reputation for being self-absorbed.  Well, folks, in the workplace today, everything that gets done, and every success you have, is usually the result of a strong relationship.  We are all busy, we all have too much on our plates, and we all complain that sometimes it feels like life is just moving too quickly for us to keep up.  But I’m here to tell you that if you want to stand out as a go to person, then it’s important to master things like sympathy protocol.  If someone you know is suffering, be better than everyone else at taking a few minutes to find out what they need and give it to them.  People really appreciate those who come through in a crisis.

Published Friday, December 21, 2007 7:00 AM by AlexandraLevit

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About AlexandraLevit

Alexandra Levit has been there and done that. She's the author of They Don't Teach Corporate in College: A Twenty-Something's Guide to the Business World (Career Press, 2004). Alex has spent all of her post-college career (eight memorable years) in Corporate America and recently founded the career consultancy, Inspiration @Work. She speaks frequently at universities and corporations and has appeared in more than 500 media outlets including ABC News, Associated Press, National Public Radio, the New York Times, USA Today, and the Wall Street Journal.

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Water Cooler Wisdom is a career advice blog by Alexandra Levit, author of They Don't Teach Corporate in College, How'd You Score That Gig, and Success for Hire. Water Cooler Wisdom is sponsored exclusively by Getthejob.com.
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