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IT'S THAT TIME! Listen any time. Or dial into the live show Sat at 8 am. The greater exchange happens first in the morning with God. SATURDAY 8 am - ONLINE OR DIAL IN 516-453-6065 TO TALK TO THE HOST & Join the conversation. Hey you, It's time to take control of your life. Did you know that conversation and connecting with others heal? It's in the conversation that we discover that we are more alike than we are different. Grab your mug and fill it up, and let's talk QUIET QUITTING. In the early 2020s, driven largely by social media, quiet quitting emerged as a much-publicized trend in the United States and elsewhere. Today, it seems, it's almost all you hear. In a September 2022 Harvard Business Review article aimed at explaining the quiet quitting phenomenon to worried executives, professors Anthony C. Klotz and Mark C. Bolino observed, “Quiet quitters continue to fulfill their primary responsibilities, but they’re less willing to engage in activities known as citizenship behaviors: no more staying late, showing up early, or attending non-mandatory meetings.” As an avid conversationalist, I began to think about how some quietly quitting on life, and I wanted to talk about it. Suicide is prevalent, and there is not a day that goes by that you don't read about someone you know through social media or personally taking their own life. Beyond the workplace, the term “quiet quitting” is now being applied to nonwork aspects of people’s lives, such as marriages and relationships. According to a Gallup survey of workers age 18 and older taken in June 2022, quiet quitters “make up at least 50% of the U.S. workforce—probably more.” All of life calls for commitment, stamina, and grit. You will want to quit. I hope to make you realize today that doing it quietly is a trick. LET'S TALK ABOUT IT