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Recovery Enviroment

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should i get back with my ex just because i have not found anyone else?

I am a 38 year old single mother of 2. He is the father of my children and we have been friends since we were 14 years old. He has always been loving and he adores our children but he had some drug related issues and now he is going through recovery and he comes back after 5 years of seperation and wants to pick up where he left off. I never stopped loving him but found it stressful to live with him. Now things are going great because he is in a controlled enviroment (not jail) but he is trying hard but I know there is always a chance for a slip up. he will always be recovering and I just dont want to go bacj to the way it was before but he has been clean now for over a year and things has been great the last 2 months. feels like old times and the children always wanted him home and I missed the sober man I met when we were young. I long for a relationship but at what cost. should i just leave things the way they are or try to rekindle an old flame?

If you're willing to accept the fact that he may break your heart again, than go for it...
Have a discussion... tell him your fears, doubts, etc. Make your decision based off of the sincerity in his answer.

Also, has he ever went this long being sober? Has he tried to remain sober before but failed again? Or did he already go through his one downfall and seems to be on the right path again?

Improve Employee Productivity by paying Attention to Air Quality with regular Air Duct Cleaning

Copyright (c) 2010 Alison Withers

Paying attention to the air quality is generally accepted to be one of the main ways of ensuring people are working in a comfortable environment.

There are two reasons why it's significant. The first is the employer's duty of responsibility to the building's occupants under Health and Safety legislation.

The effect a so-called "sick building" can have on productivity is more important, however. It doesn't matter whether the building is a school, a hospital, or a commercial or public sector office.

Although a number of factors, from upholstery to humidity, the prevalence of computers to office layout have been identified as potential causes of a sick building, one of the main factors is air quality.

Health and Safety analysis has found that sick building syndrome is more common in air-conditioned buildings, where more than 55% of staff report symptoms and it has been shown to affect the level of absenteeism.

Maintaining the quality of the air circulating in your building by having a regular schedule of air duct inspection and duct cleaning therefore makes sense especially when, as in an air conditioned building, air is being circulated in what's effectively a closed and sealed system.

Dust particles, bacteria, moulds, excess moisture and fibres can all affect the efficiency of a duct system, especially because part of what it's designed to do is to extract pollutants from the building's environment to keep the air clean.

If people persistently complain of suffering from irritation to the eyes, nose and throat, skin irritation or rashes, headaches, lethargy or irritability and inability to concentrate it's likely that poor air quality in the building is a factor. You have some evidence that their cause is something in your building if their symptoms go away after a person has been away from the building for a few days.

When you consider that most people spend more than eight hours of every day in their work environment it makes sense to help them stay alert, awake and able to perform to the best of their ability.

It could affect the level of care they can give patients in a hospital, and also the patients' recovery time. It's plainly more desirable in a school that pupils are alert and teachers can keep them focused and able to learn unhampereed by something like air quality.

Office work can sometimes be repetitive and tedious, but also in situations like call centres can be stressful when staff are dealing with an angry or irritated caller. If your staff are in a customer-facing environment representing your business or service it's obviously important to you that they can maintain a calm, helpful and professional persona.

The implications for your organisation's continued good name and ultimately profitability are obvious.

However, there's another reason why maintaining and regularly cleaning duct systems can affect profitability.

As new regulations are introduced for employers, which will mean work buildings will have to demonstrate energy efficiency and emissions into the enviroment, and equally if you have a system that's not performing to maximum efficiency and could be adding to your energy costs, duct systems working at peak efficiency are going to become even more important in controlling your overheads.

Therefore it makes sound commercial sense to invest in regular air duct cleaning and maintenance.

About the Author

Air quality has been identified as a factor in sick building syndrome. It can affect the productivity and health of your workforce and can affect schools, hospitals and office/administration buildings, especially if they are air conditioned. Regular maintenance and
air duct cleaning
of air systems makes economic sense. By journalist
Ali Withers

Production Enviroment Lessons Learned

Recovery Enviroment

Written by admin

April 24th, 2006 at 12:35 pm