This document discusses compassionate, respectful, and trustworthy values. It provides indicators for each value, such as expressing gratitude, being considerate of others' feelings, and having alignment between words and actions. The document encourages being compassionate even during hardship by recognizing others are also suffering. It promotes respecting others by listening without insulting, valuing opinions, and avoiding pressure. It describes trust as self-awareness and wanting the best for all. It concludes by asking the reader to rank these values by importance.
3. You express gratitude.
“Doing things that light us up
and make us feel good — people
think of that as being selfish, but
often that leads us to better
behavior toward other people,”
One way to do that is to
count the positives.
4. Be compassionate toward others.
Even where you're feeling at
your very worst, remember that
other people are also feeling
uncertainty, pain, hardship,
sadness, disappointment, and
loss. In no way does this belittle
your own feelings but it does
allow you to realize that people
often react from their hurt and
pain rather than from their
whole self, and kindness is the
key to seeing past the raging
emotions and connecting with
the real person inside.
15. Want the best for others.
You aren't playing a
work-game where
only one or two
people win and the
rest don't, but help to
make the pie bigger
for everyone
16. CHECK YOUR VALUES
Rank your values from 1-10 with “1”
being the most important item.
____Love ____Trust
____Discipline ____Respect
____Kindness ____Compassion
____Honesty