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This year has been incredibly tough–for all of us. As a follow up to my first blog post on this topic, I’m exploring gratitude and challenging you to let go of the not-so-good parts yet keep the good parts, because one benefit of great change is the opportunity to more easily implement more change.
It has been an interesting “year-ish” –particularly in the sense of the ancient saying, “may you live in interesting times.” During this year, I have written about the importance of caring for yourself, of being gentle with yourself, of continuing to find meaning. All that still applies. But equally important is pure fortitude.
The Los Angeles Zoo announced its 1st strategic plan for conservation that identifies a set of focused objectives for future work while strengthening existing conservation partnerships. The plan features a broad range of conservation initiatives & seeks to engage the unique diversity of the City of Los Angeles.
In our work, we do a lot of plans – strategic plans, master plans, governance plans, business plans. After we are done, we often wonder how and even if they’ll get implemented. Well, this week, I had the privilege of seeing a big payoff of planning.
Even though using “lorem ipsum” often arouses curiosity due to its resemblance to classical Latin, it is not intended to have meaning. Where text is visible in a document, people tend to focus on the textual content rather than upon overall presentation.