Lisa Earle McLeod: Forget Perfect, Finding Grace when you can't even find clean underwear
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February 23, 2009
Forget Perfect Monday Minute
Ode to Construction Workers:
Unsung Heroes of America 
"I often think that blue-collar workers are the unsung heroes of the American way of life. Not just the constructions workers, but all the other people out there who fix and build stuff so that we don't have to worry about it."
You can usually tell by their hands. Gnarled and rough, dry and cracked, bearing scars from years of twisting metal, pounding concrete, ripping lumber, stripping plastic and pushing and shoving all kinds of rough material into awkward shapes and tight places.
 
I've always had a thing for blue-collar workers, especially the guys who work in construction.
 
No, I'm not trolling for catcalls or wolf whistles. But whenever I see a bunch of men by the side of the road, or on top of a building, or leaning out of a bucket truck, my heart softens.
 
I was driving home the other night and ran into some terrible traffic.
 
It was construction on the freeway and four lanes of cars were being funneled into one skinny strip of asphalt bordered by concrete barricades on both sides. After 45 minutes of stop and go frustration, I finally worked my way up to the actual construction site.
 
And there they were.
 
At 9 o'clock on a cold Saturday night, working dangerously close to the oncoming traffic, was a crew of guys (or at least they appeared to be guys) with their jack hammers, shovels, pick axes, and all the assorted trucks and diggers required to turn raw materials into a road.
 
I'm not quite sure what they were doing. But it didn't look fun.
 
Some of them were furiously shoveling gravel, the others were using their hands to guide an impossibly large piece of concrete hanging from a crane, into a very small space, pushing and shoving it with all their might.
 
As I watched them from my 5 mph crawl, I was struck yet again by what dangerous work they do.
 
Here they are on a Saturday night, literally risking their lives, or at least a finger or two, so we can have an extra lane on our highway.
 
Yes, I know they're getting paid. But how much would someone have to pay you to stick your hand between two huge pieces of concrete while one of them was dangling from a wire? In the wind. Next to oncoming traffic.
 
I don't want to be melodramatic here, but I often think that blue-collar workers are the unsung heroes of the American way of life. Not just the constructions workers, but all the other people out there who fix and build stuff so that we don't have to worry about it. 
 
The thousands of real live human beings whose backbreaking labor makes America hum.
 
Doing work that is not only physically demanding, but also takes more brains than most people realize. You try figuring out how to level three tons of concrete on an uneven surface. As for the women who don hard hats, my little writer's cap is off to you.  You're tough ladies, and yes, you are still ladies.
 
So the next time you see somebody with banged up hands, you might want to thank them. They very likely may have built something you use every day.
 
And if you're passing a crew on the highway, smile and wave. Sure they might whistle and hoot if you're a woman, but those guys work hard for their money, and the least you can do is show them a little love.
Welcome, E.R. Snell Subscribers
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ERS logo
If you think a bunch of hardhats don't appreciate the value of LOVE in the workplace, you've never worked with E. R. Snell, a 75-year-old family-owned firm headquartered just outside of Atlanta, with five divisions located throughout the state of Georgia. 
 
Lisa recently spoke to their supervisors, managers and executives.  Her keynote "Recession Style Leadership:  How to keep hope and profit margins alive during tough times" resonated with this group of leaders who are being challenged on a daily basis to keep spirits up and costs down, while they, literally, pave the way to a prosperous future. 
 
This quote from their treasurer sums up their business philosophy:
 
"We strive to leave every situation knowing we've done the right thing."
 
- Chris Snell, Executive VP & Treasurer

Recession Leadership:  Three Strategies for the Boss
(reprinted for E.R. Snell Contractor, Inc.)
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Road Work
I don't know which is worse - losing your job or being the one who has to make the cuts. Yes, I know there are still some heartless execs out there slashing jobs and burning while taking huge bonuses and sleeping soundly in custom sheets.

But there are also millions of business owners lying awake at night wondering how they're going to make payroll. Hard-working people who are tapping retirement savings and credit cards just to keep their businesses afloat, who, after making heartbreaking layoffs, are now working 16-hour days to make up for the people they had to let go.
Lisa Earle McLeod is an author, keynote speaker, nationally syndicated columnist, business consultant, and media personality.

Copyright 2008 Lisa Earle McLeod. All rights reserved.