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  <title>The Workplace Problem No One Trains For: GRIEF</title>
  <description>The Workplace Problem No One Trains Leaders For: Grief Grief doesn’t politely stay home. It shows up in meetings, deadlines, silence, irritability, and decisions that suddenly feel harder than they used to. And most leaders don’t recognize it when it arrives. Instead, grief at work gets mislabeled as disengagement, attitude, or a performance problem. In this deeply personal episode of The Leadership Sandbox, Tammy J. Bond steps into a conversation leaders are rarely trained to handle—but are guaranteed to face. Drawing from her own experience with sudden loss and ongoing family challenges, Tammy unpacks how grief quietly impacts capacity, behavior, and trust inside organizations. This is not a therapy episode. This is a leadership episode. &amp;amp;nbsp;  &amp;amp;nbsp; In This Episode, You’ll Learn:   Why grief doesn’t “end” when bereavement leave does   How grief shows up at work in ways leaders often misinterpret   The difference between a performance issue and a capacity issue   Why treating grief like a character flaw erodes trust   Three practical leadership moves that create safety without lowering standards   How to apply the COMMAND Leadership Operating System to moments of grief   What it really means to lead humans—not just workflows   &amp;amp;nbsp;  &amp;amp;nbsp; What Grief Often Looks Like at Work:   Slower thinking and decision fatigue   Missed details or forgetfulness   Irritability or a shorter fuse   Withdrawal in meetings   Perfectionism or micromanaging   Being present—but not fully functional   These are not motivation problems. They are capacity challenges. &amp;amp;nbsp;  &amp;amp;nbsp; Leadership Moves That Matter:   Name reality without making it weird   Create a capacity plan—not a sympathy speech   Keep the standard and adjust the path   Grief doesn’t remove accountability. It requires clearer priorities and fewer moving parts. &amp;amp;nbsp;  &amp;amp;nbsp; COMMAND in Action:   Claim Reality – Grief exists in your workforce whether you acknowledge it or not   Own Impact – Your response sets the emotional temperature   Map the System – Leave, workload, coverage, expectations   Move the Behavior – Check-ins, clarity, flexibility with structure   Anchor the Standard – Humanity and accountability can coexist   Normalize Accountability – Fewer priorities, clearly measured   Deploy &amp;amp;amp; Defend – Protect people from being punished for being human   &amp;amp;nbsp;  &amp;amp;nbsp; Bottom Line Grief isn’t a performance issue first. It’s a capacity issue. And capacity is a leadership responsibility. If you only know how to lead people on their best days—you don’t yet know how to lead. &amp;amp;nbsp;  &amp;amp;nbsp; Listen &amp;amp;amp; Share If this episode resonated, share it with a leader, manager, or team member who could benefit from a more human approach to leadership during hard seasons. &amp;amp;nbsp;  &amp;amp;nbsp; &amp;amp;nbsp; </description>
  <author_name>Leadership Sandbox: Strategies to Uplevel Workplace Communication, Team Collaboration, and Your Corporate Culture</author_name>
  <author_url>https://www.bondgroupenterprises.com/</author_url>
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