Bravery
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Bravery is a strength within the virtue category of courage, one of six virtues that subcategorize the 24 strengths. Courage describes strengths that help you exercise your will and face adversity. The other strengths in Courage are bravery, honesty, perseverance, and zest.
Research findings indicate that bravery helps people tolerate the vulnerability that is part of growing close to others, thereby helping in the formation and maintenance of close relationships. Learn how to activate this strength and all of your other strengths with your personalized Total 24 Report.
Every day, federal, state, and local law enforcement officers engage in exceptional acts of bravery while in the line of duty. Often, such acts place the officers involved at personal risk of injury or result in their sustaining a physical injury. To honor these acts of bravery, Congress passed the Law Enforcement Congressional Badge of Bravery Act of 2008 (Public Law 110-298), creating the Federal Law Enforcement Congressional Badge of Bravery and the State and Local Law Enforcement Congressional Badge of Bravery. The act establishes an award to honor exceptional acts of bravery in the line of duty by federal, state, and local law enforcement officers. The medals are awarded annually by the U.S. Attorney General and are presented by the recipients' Congressional representatives.
The Hanna Awards, which have been held annually since 1983, have become a symbol of prestige, within both the law enforcement community and the Commonwealth as a whole. It's an opportunity to publicly recognize the bravery of members of the law enforcement community who put their lives on the line by dedicating themselves to safety throughout Massachusetts.
Nominations are made for outstanding acts of bravery performed by a member (or members) of your department between January 1, 2021 through December 31, 2021, following these criteria. The selection committee will require a detailed narrative of the incident for which your member is being nominated, along with news clippings or any substantiating information you feel will assist the selection committee with its decision
BRAITMAN: It brought me to my knees. I spent decades trying to avoid feeling sad. I tried to achieve my way out of sadness. I tried to use excellence as an analgesic on a pain that I believe I couldn't have admitted was there. And seeing these kids face their own losses and their own pain with such bravery just brought me to my knees.
So, with warmth and with validation, encourage kids to do hard things, even if it provokes tough feelings. Incentivize brave behavior, set up bravery practices, and praise distress tolerance. If your kid is afraid to go to soccer practice, challenge them to go for the first 15 minutes, and then go get a treat as a reward and reflect on how they were able to face their fear, even though it was hard. The next week, set the goal to attend for 25 minutes and start building those bravery muscles. Hold firm with expectations and limits, while also validating tough emotions and providing warmth, love, and support. Paradoxically, the best way to support anxious kids is often by encouraging them to get more comfortable with being uncomfortable.
After a few months of headlining and selling out small clubs, The Bravery booked a residency at the Lower East side club Arlene's Grocery. The Bravery played every Thursday at 10pm in May 2004. Every show sold out and garnered the attention of many record labels. Around the same time, the band received their first radio airplay on the show 'Alter Ego' hosted by Paul Driscoll on Boston's WFNX. Aaron Axeleson at Live 105 in San Francisco and Zane Lowe at BBC Radio 1 in the UK, also downloaded the MP3 of \"An Honest Mistake\" from thebravery.com. With three major radio stations around the world playing the MP3 of \"An Honest Mistake\" and sold-out shows in New York, The Bravery signed in August 2004 to Island Def Jam in the United States and Loog Records in the UK.
Courage (also called bravery or valor) is the choice and willingness to confront agony, pain, danger, uncertainty, or intimidation. Valor is courage or bravery, especially in battle.
Physical courage is bravery in the face of physical pain, hardship, even death, or threat of death; while moral courage is the ability to act rightly in the face of popular opposition,[1] shame, scandal, discouragement, or personal loss.
In the Hindu tradition, mythology has given many examples of bravery, valor and courage, with examples of both physical and moral courage exemplified. In the Eastern tradition, the Chinese text Tao Te Ching offers a great deal of thoughts on courage, both physical and moral.
You know, Nathaniel Hawthorne once said that heroes can be heroes only in a heroic world. What he meant, of course, is that service and bravery can be honored only in a society that puts a premium on those qualities. When we honor those who in service and bravery stand out amongst us, we're reaffirming our own most deeply cherished beliefs and traditions.
We can only wonder at the bravery that sent Jeff and Mark into that tank. They knew that two paramedics had already passed out, but they felt they had to try. And that, of course, is what makes a hero. He has to try. He may measure odds and weigh the chances, but his heart seems to take over and make the decision for him.
\"It is my honor and privilege to serve alongside the men and women of the U.S. Marshals Service who perform courageous acts on a daily basis across our great nation. But to personally know these recipients and participate in this ceremony, truly highlights their bravery, integrity and commitment to justice for all. It also highlights the dangers that all law enforcement officers face every day in our country in their efforts to make our cities a safe place to live and raise our families. We truly owe them a debt of gratitude,\" said U.S. Marshal for the Western District of Oklahoma Johnny Kuhlman.
The corporate boardroom may be ages away from the battlefield. But in many ways, the decisions made there can feel just as important. Many of the same themes of the past still continue to play out in modern times. This includes the ideas of courage and bravery.
The Bravery stat is a measure of how brave a unit is in the face of danger. A higher bravery score reduces the amount of Morale lost due to morale-decreasing events, so a brave unit (alien or X-COM) has less likelihood of panicking or going berserk during combat.
Note: Of course, if you are so psi-forces are so powerful that they can actually set up this scenario... you don't NEED to perform any more bravery training, since you would almost never lose morale in the first place. Unlike all the other stats, bravery's usefulness is inversely proportional to how powerful your troops are compared to the enemy. In addition, the bravery experience sytem has an important difference from other stats... it's like the Opposite of reaction gains, in that sense. For Reactions, your troops with low reactions will tend to never make reaction shots, and thus will never improve, whereas your ninjas will improve fairly quickly. For bravery, it is the only stat where a low starting score makes it more likely to improve.
In fact, Bravery tends to be a self correcting weakness. Either your soldier will naturally improve, or he will die, thus ending his plague upon your squad. In that sense, the best form of bravery training is just to fight normally, and let bravery rise by itself.
I, Jasonred 18:13, 31 March 2009 (EDT), have found a disgustingly easy technique, which can be used to train your entire squad's (-1 volunteer) bravery at once. Kill all aliens except for 1 Chryssalid. Now, feed one of your soldiers to the Chryssalid, while having everyone else in a safe spot, facing away from the alien/s. Next turn, 1 unit turns around, spots the aliens, mind control the zombie, kill zombie, turn around again. End turn. Turn around, spot aliens, mind control the zombie, kill it, turn around again. Repeat add infinitum.Alternatively, use an Alien Base. Mind Control and kidnap a Chryssalid using the Grav Lift Shield exploit. Then put the Chyrssalid in a corner, trap him with 3 soldiers. Who he will then zombify, but the zombies will block his path to your other soldiers. Repeat above steps. You can't fly out of his reach in this confined space, but you save the effort of having to neutralise all the other alien forces.Result: Eventually, entire squad turns into chickens.Disadvantage: Eventually, the entire squad turns into chickens. Also, you will end up with a REALLY bad score for that mission, since it will count as having many many soldiers dying over and over. And over and over and over and over.Advantages: You can bring in 26 soldiers and train bravery for 24-25 soldiers in a very short space of time. No fear of mind control. Very easy to set-up and retreat from battle, and fast too, since you don't have to neutralize Psi capable aliens and specifically leave 1 of them alive.Note: This method is exploiting SO MANY bugs and glitches and AI failures, you might as well just use an editor, from \"honor\" point of view, lol. Admittedly, there is a very perverse sense of satisfaction in doing it this way...
Intellectual bravery is a willingness to disagree, dissent, or challenge the status quo in a setting of social risk in which you could be embarrassed, marginalized, or punished in some way. When intellectual bravery disappears, organizations develop patterns of willful blindness. Bureaucracy buries boldness. Efficiency crushes creativity. From there, the status quo calcifies and stagnation sets in.
The responsibility for creating a culture of intellectual bravery lies in leadership. As a leader, you set the tone, create the vibe, and define the prevailing norms. Whether or not your company has a culture of intellectual bravery depends on your ability to establish a pattern of rewarded rather than punished vulnerability. Let me share two examples. 59ce067264
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