Thanks to visit codestin.com
Credit goes to www.scribd.com

0% found this document useful (0 votes)
62 views1 page

New This I Believe

Flynn Kruchell believes that humans and society function based on cooperation. They learned this through their first job where they realized the importance of their work to others in the community. While skiing with friends, Flynn found themselves on a difficult slope outside of their ability. With a friend's guidance, they were able to ski down the slope, something they could not have done alone. This experience reinforced their belief that people achieve more through communication and collaboration with others.

Uploaded by

api-438603459
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
62 views1 page

New This I Believe

Flynn Kruchell believes that humans and society function based on cooperation. They learned this through their first job where they realized the importance of their work to others in the community. While skiing with friends, Flynn found themselves on a difficult slope outside of their ability. With a friend's guidance, they were able to ski down the slope, something they could not have done alone. This experience reinforced their belief that people achieve more through communication and collaboration with others.

Uploaded by

api-438603459
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 1

This I Believe

Flynn Kruchell

I believe that humans and human society function entirely on cooperation with each
other. I’ve spent time both at my first job to learn this and with the people around me to realize
that people around me are more important than they might seem, both to me and everyone
else. Last summer, I started working my first job at Nature’s Oasis. Here I learned the true value
of my work to others and to an overall community. During the time I worked there I did multiple
very important jobs, that if no one had been doing the store would have fallen apart. The most
common of these for me was bulk bagging. I would help to make sure that some of the most
important items sold would be ready. I also helped to bag groceries at some points, providing
valuable help to the cashiers at the busiest time of the year. Experiencing this helped teach me
what having a job means to me, to work with others to create some sort of product or service to
the community, and I greatly value that experience personally.

Earlier this year, on a cold February morning I found myself skiing with friends at
Purgatory. I haven’t been particularly great at skiing in the past, most of the time I couldn’t ski
anything much harder than a blue. We were enjoying our time, heading down the mountain after
stopping for food. It was all going well until I found myself on top of a slope that up until that
point was far outside of my ability. At that moment I started to panic a little bit. There weren’t
very many other trails branching off of that point and going back up the slope isn’t really an
option. My friend there was able to guide me down the slope, helping me do something that at
that point would have been out of the question for me. If I had been alone in that situation I
really don’t know what I would have done. I might have sat at that point for 20+ minutes building
up the courage to do it, or I might have tried to find a different path to take, but being there with
other people to help helped to unlock my capabilities.
People function work best when communicating and collaborating with others- this I
believe.

You might also like