Safety Tidbits:
Click here for this week’s Safety Tidbits including information about proper lifting techniques.
Here are a few simple lifting tips.
-Take a balanced stance with your feet about a shoulder-width apart. One foot can be behind the object and the other next to it.
-Squat down to lift the object, but keep your heels off the floor. Get as close to the object as you can.
-Use your palms and your fingers to get a secure grip on the load. Make sure you’ll be able to maintain a hold on the object without switching your grip later.
-Lift gradually (without jerking) using your leg, abdominal and buttock muscles and keeping the load as close to you as possible. Keep your chin tucked in so as to keep a relatively straight back and neck line.
-Change directions by pointing your feet in the direction you want to go and turning your whole body. Avoid twisting at your waist while carrying a load.
-When you put a load down, use these same guidelines in reverse.
Obituary – A Wake up Call!
One morning in 1888, Alfred Nobel, inventor of dynamite, the man who had spent his life amassing a fortune from the manufacture and sale of weapons, awoke to read his own obituary. The obituary was printed as a result of a simple journalistic error. Alfred’s brother had died, and a French reporter carelessly reported the death of the wrong brother. Any man would be disturbed under the circumstances, but to Alfred the shock was overwhelming because he saw himself as the world saw him—”the dynamite King [the weapon maker],” the great industrialist who had made an immense fortune from explosives.
This, as far as the general public was concerned, was the entire purpose of his life (so said the obituary). None of his true intentions—to break down the barriers that separated men and ideas—were recognized or given serious consideration. He was quite simply in the eyes of the public a merchant of death, and for that alone he would be remembered.
As he read his obituary with shocking horror, he resolved to make clear to the world the true meaning and purpose of his life. This could be done through the final disposition of his fortune, this last will and testament would be the expression of his life’s ideals. The result was the most valued of prizes given to this day to those who have done most for the cause of world peace—the Nobel Peace Prize. Source: Robert Raines, Creative Brooding
Sort of gets one thinking, doesn’t it?
We all should be asking what do my choices say about me? What is the meaning and purpose of your life?
Safety Wayne
The two most important days in your life are the day you are born and the day you find out why. –Mark Twain
Thanks, WK
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