Last Updated on March 15, 2014 by FERS Disability Attorney
The time we expend ruminating upon future events which fail to occur; or engaging in frivolities beyond needed leisure to restore one’s mind and body; it is when action or inquiry could have answered one’s concerns that such time, once lost, is lost forever.
Some of the effort expended can be justified; certainly, before one can engage in action or inquiry, some time must be used for thoughtful preparation; but to ruminate endlessly in repetitive, circular fashion, is to allow for human frailty to overwhelm that characteristic which should be paramount in our lives: rationality and the ability to properly reflect, analyze and judge accordingly.
Time has become a commodity of worth beyond mere measurement of the movement of objects; it is limited in scope but demanded far and above the capacity of existent supply. Technology was meant to ameliorate; but we all know that it has only exponentially robbed us further of this valuable and limited unit.
For Federal and Postal employees who suffer from a medical condition, such that the medical condition impacts one’s personal and professional life, the value of time cannot be emphasized. Ruminating about one’s condition and the orientation for one’s future will not get one from point A to destination B.
Time is of the essence, and with the bureaucratic headaches and administrative delays compounding the difficulties, both at the agency level as well as with the U.S. Office of Personnel Management, delay only creates to magnify the importance of time, timing, and the measuring of timeliness.
Time expended in fruitless efforts, once lost, is lost forever.
Sincerely,
Robert R. McGill, Esquire
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My name is Cynthia, I just Retired Last May 2013 After 35yrs, of service. I was going to get me a Part-Time Job, but now I have Become Disable to work a part-time job and I really needed it. I would like to know if i could, go back and file for Disability Retirement.