Last Updated on February 17, 2022 by FERS Disability Attorney
We hear about it from ‘high-end achievers’; and every President now builds large temples to themselves, like some Greek gods with immortal canopies and call them “libraries” for the common minion to think that it is like those warm and fuzzy buildings we once visited in order to escape the ravages of our sordid childhoods.
Perhaps it is the realization of that which has come back to haunt us: Darwinism, pure materialism, and the abandonment of faith in hobbits, gnomes and angels from beyond, that leaves us with the stark nakedness of our own mortality, and the need to fulfill that vacancy by building lasting memorials that only crumble with the decadence of time.
The traditional definition connoted a lasting gift by an ancestor, where history, lineage and human relationships provided a context of meaningful inheritance, and not merely as a tombstone to admire. The wider, secondary meaning refers to any accomplishment or lasting residue of one’s self constructed to remain beyond a temporal season, or until that next great ego tears it down and replaces it with an image made in a reflecting pool of self-aggrandizement.
We all have a desire and a need to leave a legacy; whether a memento gifted through countless generations, or a memory of multi-generational gatherings for an adventure, a once-in-a-lifetime trip, and perhaps nothing more than some pearls of wisdom handed down from a rocking chair worn by the vanished paint on the floorboards of time.
Even then; as value is rarely attached to memories invoked, people either hock the wares on eBay or the local pawn shop, and convert it into cash, where the societal glee for power is defined by paying bills and possessing goods. Do people inscribe books and hand them down as a legacy left behind? Or have they been replaced with electronic tablets and kindle versions where even the monks of Tibet answer to the melody of a smartphone?
Legacies are overvalued, or so we are told; and those who leave them for others to judge, never stick around to witness the lasting or temporal effects of residual emotional consequences.
For Federal employees and U.S. Postal workers who suffer from a medical condition, such that the medical condition “forces” one to cut short one’s career and vocation by preparing, formulating and filing an effective Federal Disability Retirement application, whether the Federal or Postal employee is under FERS, CSRS or CSRS Offset, is the pull that holds one back and makes one pause, an artificial and wholly unfounded sense that one hasn’t “completed the mission” and the legacy that would be left is not quite up to par?
Such thoughts invoke a false sense of values. For, in the end, it is one’s health that should be of paramount concern, and not what is left behind.
In Federal agencies and U.S. Postal facilities all across the country, that legacy left behind is often nothing more than the shattered lives who clung too long and waited beyond the point of medical necessity, when in fact the true legacy to leave behind is a focus upon one’s health in order to move forward into the next phase of one’s life.
Sincerely,
Robert R. McGill, Attorney
Tags:
air traffic controller medical retirement,
anxiety disorder federal owcp long term,
anxiety disorder for medical retirement with federal government employment,
applying for disability through post office,
assistance fers physician statement,
attendance issues opm sickness,
blue light usps awol med or mental reasons,
can I medically retire early from the federal government? yes if illness interferes with job but you still have to prove your case,
cash award owcp and opm disability retirement – can I get both?,
describing how your diseases or injuries interferes with your performance in the federal workplace,
disability law for usps rural carrier,
disability retirement process under fers,
disability separation from government service,
disabling conditions us postal service,
dod employees with depression,
federal agent diabetes,
federal disability retirement wildland firefighter,
federal employee carpal tunnel,
federal employee light duty policy,
federal employee with lower lumbar back problems,
federal fire fighter disability retirement or resignation,
federal government and bipolar worker,
federal government hostile work environment causing stress,
federal government opm official disability letter,
federal guide to fers disability for anxiety,
federal law enforcement disability retirement,
fers disability retirement after stroke,
fers government disability retirement cancer,
getting opm medical retirement approved,
government medical retirement benefits,
help with forms for medically retiring from federal government as a civilian employee,
how to medically retire from a federal job,
how to resign from a va hospital employee system due to disabilities,
information about disability retirement fers pdf,
irs physician's statement to get early retirement,
lawyer for light duty federal employees,
leave without pay and medical retirement opm,
list of accepted disabilities opm,
list of qualified disabilities from opm depends more in not being able to do job,
lwop federal for illness,
lwop federal for illness 2 years,
lwop for service connecting disability,
medical disability resignation letter,
medical discharge federal employee: be careful most agencies will discharge you without medical disability compensation (separation is not the same as retirement),
medical remove from federal duties,
medical retirement from government service,
medically retiring from federal government,
mental disability post office,
notification from opm concerning disability approval or denial,
opm accommodation medical reasons,
opm disability benefits,
opm disability claims decisions,
opm disability form 3112 legal assistance,
opm disability last stage decision soon,
opm disability qualifying conditions,
opm disability retire with adverse action,
opm disability retirement and doctor notes,
opm disability retirement contact,
opm disability retirement for migraines,
opm eeo medical claim,
opm medical cumulative retirement,
OPM medical retirement,
opm medical retirement case carpal tunnel,
opm medical retirement disability package,
owcp and fers retirement,
owcp and postal retirement years,
owcp disability retirement rating,
owcp mental stress leave,
owcp mental stress leave usps,
owcp recurrence of injury and options,
owcp schedule award or disability retirement for depression and anxiety,
owcp usps retirement if no return to work,
personal statement of disability,
post office medical retirement,
Postal disability,
ps form 2574 resignation without medical retirement benefits form,
resigned from post office due to medical concern,
resigning from federal employment illness,
retire from federal service medically and collect unemployability,
retiring owcp degenerative disc disease attorney,
sf 3112 disability application package,
sf 3112 disability form requirements,
sf3112a for major depression,
sick leave retirement usps,
status of my opm disability retirement,
the fers disability process and one of the most experienced postal attorney in opm medical retirement,
tsp loans after federal medical separation,
under fers indefinite medical leave,
using owcp leave,
usps employees with hernia,
usps medical disability after attendance and conduct issues,
usps medical inability to perform removal,
usps related illnesses,
usps roll away accident employee removal,
va employee disability benefits,
va employee medical retirement forms,
what does the opm legal administrative specialist look to deny medical retirement claim,
who decides opm disability retirement? opm (office of personnel management that’s where the name comes from),
wrongful medically terminated from the federal government what to do?
3 thoughts on “Medical Retirement from Federal Employment: Leaving that legacy behind”