Last Updated on May 13, 2013 by FERS Disability Attorney
Medical conditions are often subtle in their subversive impact — a slow, progressively deteriorating manifestation, characterized by pain, depletion of energy and stamina, and with manifestations of symptoms which may not be immediately noticeable with a passing glance.
Most of us meet and greet each other with hardly a glance; of “hello-how-are-yous” as polite niceties which are never meant to be seriously responded to; and in the course of such brief human contact, would not know — nor care to be informed of the details — of how a person truly “is” in the context of his or her life, medical condition, or well-being.
For the Federal or Postal employee who suffers from a medical condition such that the medical condition prevents one from performing one or more of the essential elements of one’s job, being ignored at work by one’s peers, coworkers and supervisors may have become a daily and expected occurrence.
In Medieval times, a clarion call represented a clear and loud trumpeting announcing an event, a call to action, or perhaps the arrival of someone of significance, relevance and importance. For the Federal or Postal employee who may have to consider filing for Federal Disability Retirement benefits from the U.S. Office of Personnel Management, whether under FERS or CSRS, an expectation of an analogous call may never come, should not be waited upon, and likely will not occur.
Quietude is the pervasive norm in a society which is impersonal and unable to address each other with compassion or empathy. Don’t expect a clarion call to be the focal point in deciding to act upon one’s medical condition; it is a call which will likely never be trumpeted, nor heard even if made.
Sincerely,
Robert R. McGill, Esquire
Tags:
attorney representing federal workers for disability throughout the United States,
body indicators show that it's time for considering medical retirement under fers or csrs,
difficult choices for the federal worker that may lead to a longer life,
Federal Disability,
federal disability retirement - it's all about what's best for you,
federal disability retirement is all about improving your health by not doing a job that will further hurt you,
FERS disability retirement,
fers disability retirement and when it's time to take a decision,
issues and decisions that fers disability applicants must make,
it's time to think about living your life again,
law firm representing clients in opm disability law all across america,
life after an accident while working for the federal government,
like the conquering army which chooses the time and place of the battle,
nationwide representation of federal employees,
no reason to procrastinate your federal disability application,
opm disability and listening to your body,
opm disability is all about taking care of your illness and/or injury,
opm disability retirement - when procrastinating could means a deteriorating health,
opm disability: it's all about your good health,
procrastinating the opm disability filing,
representing federal employees from any us government agency,
the right time for a federal employee to file for disability retirement,
there is life outside federal employment,
time for vacation and time for reflection for disabled federal employees,
time to go to the promised land: medical healing and recuperation after a career with the federal government,
USPS disability retirement,
waiting and more waiting to file for fers disability retirement,
waiting for the clarion call that never sounds,
when an illness gets serious enough in the life of a federal worker,
when federal employees should listen to their doctors' advice,
when is the right time to apply for opm disability?,
when it is time to move on,
your body voices are the only clarion calls you'll ever get,
your decision about when to file for fers disability retirement