Last Updated on September 10, 2019 by FERS Disability Attorney
One is a question; the other, a declarative statement. The latter of a more subjective nature; the former, perhaps a composite of observations by third parties together with self analysis. Both must begin with a query — of analyzing a statement “about” myself, through others who are well-known as well as of opinions rendered and judgments passed by acquaintances and passersby strangers barely acknowledged.
“Who I am” is often answered in response to a preceding query by a third party: “Who are you?” It might be answered with fairly objective and short statements which are incontestable: I am X’s brother in-law; I am the husband of Y; “Oh, I am Sarah’s father” (in response to Sarah’s classmate who sees you standing outside of the classroom); or, “I am nobody”. This last statement, of course, has implications well beyond being an unresponsive nullity; for, it goes to the heart of one’s own assessment of one’s self, one’s consequential impact upon the limited universe of one’s role, and the very essence of an ego left abandoned.
The other — Who Am I — is often followed by the grammatical punctuation of a question mark. It is often a self-reflective query — one which causes a pause, a momentary furrowing of eyebrows raised, and then a regrouping of having just previously been taken aback by a question which stabs too closely to the essence of one’s being. Perhaps a soliloquy follows. One will normally cast the question off with a shrug and answer the self-query with, “I am X” and then move on to take out the garbage, watch a movie, see a documentary or engage in what Heidegger refers to as an activity which allows us to forget our mortality.
Will the question inevitably haunt us and force us into facing ourselves at some point in our lives? Perhaps. Can we avoid the question entirely? Maybe. It is the former, asked by others, which fails to have the force of the latter, and merely because of the placement and substitution of positions of the two words after the “Who” that makes all of the difference.
For Federal employees and U.S. Postal workers who suffer from a medical condition and who must face the prospect of facing the question, “Who I am” in reference to one’s position and role in the workplace, it is often the medical condition itself which prompts the second, more incisive query of “Who Am I?”
Does a medical condition define a person? Certainly, the Agency or the Postal Service makes it the primary issue by questioning one’s competence or capabilities based upon your condition. Both questions go to the heart of the issue in a Federal Disability Retirement application; for, in the end, the Federal Agency and the Postal Service treat both questions with a foregone conclusion of an answer: You are Nobody if you are no longer part of the “Mission”, and that is why filing for Federal Disability Retirement benefits through the U.S. Office of Personnel Management becomes a necessity.
Sincerely,
Robert R. McGill, Esquire
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