In many work environments, the numbers appear reassuring, the indicators are stable, and the reports are complete, but behind this organized image, the human being may be the weakest link, not because he is negligent, but because he works without appreciation.
Many people reduce appreciation to a passing compliment or a moral luxury that can be dispensed with when work is under pressure. The truth is that this understanding is one of the most dangerous silent obstacles to success. Appreciation is not a formal addition, but rather a basic psychological need that preserves a person’s inner balance and keeps him connected to meaning.
A person needs to feel three things that are not complicated: that he is competent in what he does, that he belongs to a context that sees and recognizes his effort, and that he is exercising his role without crushing his independence. When a person is valued, he is not pampered, but rather is reconnected with the value of what he offers. Giving turns from a burden into a choice, from a heavy obligation into an internal motivation.
Lack of appreciation does not create a collapse all at once, it works slowly. Internal motivation begins to decline, and work turns into a duty, then into a continuation motivated by salary or fear. With time, a mysterious emotional coldness appears, neither anger nor enthusiasm, only apathy that makes a person present in his body and absent in his spirit.
Take a simple example: a person who was proactive and enthusiastic, and went above and beyond what was asked of him. He was not asked, he was not thanked, and he was not recognized for his effort. Years later, he is still doing his job, but to a lesser extent. Its efficiency has not diminished, but rather the meaning within it has eroded.
This is where the real psychological burnout begins. A person works a lot and always feels like he is falling short. He loses the “taste of achievement” not because there are no results, but because there is no recognition. This combustion does not appear in reports, nor is it monitored in statistics, but it empties institutions and relationships of their soul.
The biggest obstacle to a culture of appreciation is confusing it with courtesy or loss of prestige. The truth is that intelligent judgment does not weaken management, but rather strengthens it. It is a specific, clear acknowledgment of effort, at an appropriate time, without exaggeration or favour.
Appreciation is not a luxury, it is a psychological need. Without it, the problem is not with the people, but with the lack of meaning.
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