Grand River Rocks Climbing Gym
Easter Long Weekend Hours
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Petit Bill’s Bistro is a bit quirky. And does a good job at what it does. That’s serve some French bistro fare with an overarching Newfoundland orientation — the founders are from Newfoundland and Labrador; the chef from Corner Brook, specifically.
The restaurant in Wellington West has been around for about 20 years and blends a few elegant touches — nice to have a glass of wine in a proper Riedel, if that doesn’t sound too bougy — with a certain amount of kitsch and tchotchke. I’m quite fine with that. It’s fun to look about at the decor.
The restaurant is divided into two rooms, essentially, the bar on one side, and the walls boasting what I assume are the works of local artists. There’s salt shakers and pepper mills on the tables (which have no tablecloths, at least at lunch).
The kitchen says it works towards supporting local produce as much as it can, the menu blending east coast dishes with bistro classics: that means clam strips and creamy seafood chowder are front-and-centre, the latter obviously very popular as I saw three or four bowls served. Lobster poutine is also quite a hit.
But dishes such as those you might enjoy at Montreal’s Restaurant L’Express are right there too. From a lunch menu, the duck confit and tasty beef bourguignon ($24 at lunch) with carrots, mushrooms, pearl onions and quite satisfying chunky mashed potato in a red-wine sauce (just needing a bit of salt) share space with those fish and chips and soup and a salad. Desserts include a Screech-ed Newfoundland pound cake alongside the ubiquitous crème brûlée.
Mussels/Moules to start are very plump, juicy and tender morsels with a simple but flavourful white wine broth. The “Lame Duck” confit for lunch ($27) was cooked perfectly and plated with wilted spinach and salt-vinegar smashed potatoes, which were delicious and just on the very edge of being a bit too crispy. The addition of ginger to the greens adds a pleasant piquancy while partridgeberry gastrique, made from the red berry of an evergreen native to the east coast, popped in some acidity to balance the luscious fat of the duck.
A bottle of Niagara’s Vineland Estates Winery house cab-merlot, labelled for the restaurant, is $44. With service that is casual, friendly and able to read a table, the vibe of the Petit Bill’s dining room is relaxed but with a bit of the buzz that comes from a fairly busy lunch trade, even for a Monday.
Dinner prices are aligned more with the bistro than the casual NF venue that might serve up a Jiggs Dinner: lobster risotto is $66 and classic steak frites with ribeye is $64.
Speaking of that classic Canadian/east coast boiled dinner of corned beef and cabbage, Petit Bill’s Bistro is offering such a “Newfoundland Supper” event on April 12. I’m sure it would make for an entertaining visit for peas puddin’, cod tongues and fisherman’s brewis, the salt cod dish with ship’s biscuit and often a drizzle of molasses. Down home goodness, yes b’y.
Check out my latest post Duck confit at Petit Bill’s Bistro from AndrewCoppolino.com.
Walter Jon Williams’ 2002 Destiny’s Way is the fourteenth book in the New Jedi Order series, which takes place in the Star Wars Expanded Universe.
Goodness has triumphed. The Empire has been reduced to a mere remnant. The New Republic is the Old Republic restored, minus the Old Republic’s fatal flaws. It’s all over except for the triumphant improvisational jizz solo1.
There is the small matter of the Yuuzhan Vong invasion.
…
For many years, 115 University Avenue served as a lively center for community participation activities. The building supported day activities, horticulture programming, group learning opportunities, and social gatherings for adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities. Its well developed garden areas and flexible indoor spaces helped foster connection, routine, and a sense of belonging for many people.
When the COVID 19 pandemic began, everything changed. Public health restrictions, the shift in program models, and the changing needs of the people we support resulted in the building being used far less frequently. Although the structure remained fully accessible, its aging layout and infrastructure no longer aligned with modern needs. As a result, the space became significantly underused. The gap between what the building could offer and what the community needed has grown wider each year.
Today, that story is shifting. KW Habilitation is reimagining 115 University Avenue and bringing new life back into a space that has always held tremendous potential. Essential upgrades like the roof and windows have already been completed, and work on a new and accessible kitchen is about to begin. These early improvements are the starting point of a much larger vision to create a flexible and welcoming community place.♦
The renovated building will support a wide range of opportunities that reflect the diverse areas of need for our community. These include senior drop in opportunities, expanded options for adults with complex needs, horticulture therapy, onsite training opportunities, and community events held in the multipurpose spaces. The renovation will not increase the size of the building, instead, it will transform how the building is used and open the door to meaningful engagement for many more people. Once finished, we believe this will create a stronger sense of connection for people, families, and the broader community.
We’re off to a strong start thanks to a generous family donation and partial funding from the Ministry of Children, Community and Social Services, but to reopen our community space this fall, we need more financial support. Every contribution will help us finish what has begun.
As progress continues, we’ll share updates, stories, and ways to get involved. Together, we can bring this renewed vision to life and create a space where everyone feels welcome and connected.
The post Reimagining 115 University Avenue appeared first on KW Habilitation.
We are pleased to share the following update from Holly Hendershot and Christa Haanstra who have been helping us with the strategic planning process at KW Habilitation.
Hi everyone,
I wanted to take a moment to share an update on our strategic planning work.
Over the past several months, we’ve been engaging across the organization to shape the next chapter for KW Habilitation. Thanks to the time, input, and thought many of you have contributed along the way, we are now nearing the final stages of the plan.
In March, more than 25 staff came together in a workshop to help build our five-year objectives, a meaningful milestone in this process and a reflection of our commitment to shaping this plan together.
We have also refreshed our vision and core values to better reflect who we are today and the future we are working toward. We are in the final stages of defining our 5-year strategic objectives and key outcomes, which will guide our focus over the coming years.
In the weeks ahead, we will be sharing the draft plan with a group of staff representatives and people we support to gather feedback and ensure it reflects a range of perspectives and experiences. This step is an important part of our commitment to building a plan that is both meaningful and grounded in the realities of our work and community.
We look forward to sharing the final plan soon. Thank you again for your continued engagement, care, and commitment to this process.
Holly and Christa
The post A Strategic Planning Update appeared first on KW Habilitation.
The title of the article in the Woolwich Observer is "Community experts say Lanxess is not doing enough to address contaminated hotspots in Canagagigue Creek". Susan B. and Tiffany Svensson , Chair of TAG (Technical Advisory Group), both are quoted as stating that Lanxess and their hired Risk Assessor (Stantec) are taking shortcuts. First of all this whole thing about "hotspots" has been beaten to death by all parties. These alleged "hotspots" are basically very convenient locations for consultants, engineers and contractors to access the Creek both for monitoring /sampling purposes as well as for possible remediation. They are magically located right at the intersection (bridges) of New Jerusalem Rd. and the Canagagigue (Gig) , followed by miraculously the next downriver bridge at Northfield Dr. again followed miraculously by the last bridge over the "Gig" at Jigs Hollow Rd. (#46). Of course extensive sampling at those three locations has resulted in more exceedances there than in other less sampled locations.
Now the two TAG reps are not incorrect when they state that there are large exceedances of health criteria at those three spots. But seriously if there are exceedances miles downstream at Northfield Dr. and Jigs Hollow Rd. do you really think that there aren't lots of other exceedances upstream closer to the source namely Uniroyal Chemical? In my opinion TAG members were trying to be accommodating and compromise with Lanxess and the Ministry of Environment by suggesting/agreeing with the three "hot spots" claims. This has been the huge failure of citizens in general and UPAC, CPAC, RAC & TAG (now TRAC) and most definitely Woolwich Township. They have all been terrified of confronting the polluter. It's as if they believe that they can somehow be criminally charged for holding the polluter and his kid gloved regulator to account for their gross negligence which has resulted in both serious health issues and shortened lifespans for some Elmira residents.
Four years later and Lanxess continue to uphold their predecessors skills at perpetual delay. If the locals don't immediately accommodate the polluter's plans then the company's response is to do nothing. Every dollar they put off spending today is less money down the road both due to devaluation of that money as well as due to ongoing discharge to groundwater, air and the Creek. I expect that another one hundred years of delay while costing both downstream human beings and the environment health impairments will greatly reduce Uniroyal on-site contamination. Yes it's merely been shifted including as far as Lake Erie but if we're feeling bad about that we can always put a straw (pipeline) into the lake and suck some of the toxins back up here for consumption. I think that is referred to as political closed loop recycling.
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Turn PM instincts into a superpower for building AI-powered products
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How WhatsApp became the infrastructure of everyday life
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Join the KWMP Dance Club, a vibrant, bi-weekly dance series designed to foster community, fitness, and fun through beginner-to-advanced level dance instruction.
Plus, we’re excited to announce a special guest teacher for this session: Darren Burkett!
Darren is an award-winning theatre performer and educator with international credits, including tours of Matilda and Angelina Ballerina. With 20 years of global teaching experience, he brings world-class expertise and energy to the dance studio.
Available Classes Date Dance Type Instructors April 9 Musical Theatre Tap Ciara Moules & Laura Hole April 23 Chair (Beginner)Beginner/Intermediate – 7:00pm to 8:00pm
Intermediate/Advanced – 8:00pm to 9:30pm
KWMP Arts Centre (14 Shaftsbury Drive, Kitchener)
Beginner/Intermediate ClassesTailored to people who are new to dance or have basic training, this class is perfect for those who want to explore dance and/or hone their skills in a casual and low-pressure environment. Build confidence in movement with slower-paced instruction, a break down of technique and the introduction of basic choreography – and have fun while you’re doing it!
Class Structure: (1 hour total) Approx. 0.5hr Warm/Technique, 0.5hr Choreography
Intermediate/Advanced ClassesFor more experienced dancers who want to challenge themselves, continue to push their skills and are comfortable picking up choreography. This class will be less focused on the basics and more about exploring musicality, style and more complex moves and combinations. It will include faster-paced choreography, transitions and a focus on performance quality. Great for audition training and taking your dance skills to the next level!
Class Structure: (1.5 Hour total) Approx. 0.5hr Warm Up, 1hr Choreography
Cost$20 per class ($15 for KWMP Members). Sign up for a KWMP Membership.
Register Now
NO REFUNDS WILL BE PROVIDED DUE TO CANCELLATIONS.
The post KWMP Dance Club – Spring 2026 appeared first on K-W Musical Productions.
Jane Gaskell’s 1964 The Shiny Narrow Grin is (just barely) a vampire novel.
What better way to reunite with her once-absent father Slade than for Terry to convince Slade to recklessly speed? Nobody could have foreseen the accident.
Or the Boy.
…
I remember working on a dataset once; nothing unusual, just rows and columns, numbers that needed cleaning, patterns that needed to be found.
♦At first, it felt like any other task.
You look at distributions.
You check for missing values.
You try to make the data “usable.”
But then there was a moment; small, but enough to stay with me.
A column that showed access. Not just usage, but access.
And suddenly, the gaps weren’t abstract anymore.
Some entries had everything filled in; consistent, complete, predictable. Others were scattered. Missing. Inconsistent.
At a technical level, it was just incomplete data. But it didn’t feel like that.
Because behind those missing values weren’t just errors. They were people.
People who didn’t show up in the system the same way others did. And that’s when it clicked.
I had always thought of inequality as something obvious. Something visible. Something you could point at and say, this is unfair.
But a lot of inequality doesn’t look like that. It’s quieter.
It exists in who gets included and who doesn’t.
In who has access and who doesn’t.
In who even knows what’s possible and who doesn’t.
Two people can have the same ability, the same potential.
But if one of them grows up with access to information, guidance, and opportunities; and the other doesn’t, the outcomes will look completely different.
And we’ll call it merit. But it’s not.
It’s exposure.
That realisation changes how you see systems. Because systems don’t just process data. They reflect reality.
And sometimes, they quietly reinforce the gaps already present in it. Nowhere is this more visible than in education.
We talk about education as a solution and it is. But only when it reaches everyone.
Because education isn’t just about classrooms or textbooks. It’s about knowing that certain paths exist. It’s about having someone tell you, “You can do this.” It’s about access to the kind of information that shapes decisions early on.
For many children in our country, that access still isn’t guaranteed.
Not because they lack ability. But because the system doesn’t always reach them in time.
And that’s the part we don’t always see.
The missed opportunities that never get recorded. The potential that never becomes data. The talent that never gets the chance to be measured.
We often focus on improving systems making them faster, smarter, more efficient.
But maybe the real question is:
Who are these systems actually reaching?
Because a system can work perfectly… and still leave people out.
Not all inequality is in the data. Some of it is in who never made it into the dataset at all.♦
Not Everything Unequal Is Visible was originally published in Code Like A Girl on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
We often hear this advice early in our careers:
“Find a mentor.”
Someone wiser. Someone experienced. Someone who can guide you through the chaos.
And while that advice isn’t wrong, it’s incomplete.
Because in the quiet corners of professional growth, there’s a truth we don’t talk about enough:
Having a mentee might shape you more than having a mentor ever will.What Mentoring Quietly Teaches You
Being a mentor is about learning how to think in the presence of someone else’s uncertainty.
In that process, you start developing skills that are hard to build in isolation:
These are not “soft skills.”
These are the foundations of leadership.
Despite this, mentorship often carries an unnecessary stigma.
People assume it requires:
So they wait.
“I’ll mentor when I’m more experienced.” “I’m not ready yet.”
But mentorship doesn’t begin with authority.
It begins with experience, no matter how small.
At its core, mentorship is not a program.
It’s a conversation.
It starts when you say:
That’s it.
You don’t need to be years ahead.
You just need to be one step ahead and willing to share it.
Because what feels obvious to you might be a breakthrough for someone else.
The Compounding Effect of SharingWhen someone learns from your lived experiences:
They skip avoidable mistakes.
They move faster with more clarity.
And in helping them, you refine your own thinking in ways that no book or course can replicate.
Mentorship, in this sense, is not an act of giving.
It’s a system of mutual growth.
So yes, find mentors. Learn from them. Absorb what you can.
But don’t stop there.
Become someone others can learn from.
Not because you have reached the top,
but because you have started the climb.
That’s where real growth begins.
♦Why Mentoring Junior Engineers Will Accelerate Your Career More Than Theirs was originally published in Code Like A Girl on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
I suggest that possibly as much as tonnes of contaminants have now been spread far and wide. I further suggest that they continue spreading on a day to day basis. I mean why wouldn't they? Any alleged proof otherwise is that of sycophants, co-optees, fellow travellors, client driven credentialed experts, self-serving credentialed experts who don't want to mess up their financial gravy train with the Ontario Ministry of Environment and finally politicians. Yes I suppose it is possible for a few honest people to be fooled by all the aforementioned. Maybe it's especially possible for honest and uninformed people to be fooled by all the other folks mentioned.
Yesterday Luisa D'Amato of the K-W Record suggested that "Anger deepens in Wilmot over water". While I believe that she is correct I also think that that very same anger is throughout the Region of Waterloo. Developers and builders are angry about losing future revenue streams. Everyday, informed citizens are angry about the power and influence of those same builders and developers being the tail that is wagging the dog. How nice to be able to step to the front of the water line it must be for them. The Townships of Woolwich, Wellesley and North Dumphries must also be angry as they understand that their water really isn't theirs according to the Region. All the Region has to do is start pumping those township aquifers until they dry up. Maybe they already are doing so .
Meanwhile in Woolwich their politicians who have gone with the flow for decades may actually just be starting to regret their laissez faire attitudes. Laissez faire attitudes generally mean to let it happen or leave it to do it's own thing. That has been what most Woolwich Councils have done with others stepping in and putting a thumb on the scale to ensure that temporary momentum by citizens remains temporary. That is what Sandy Shantz did back in 2015 to bail out both Chemtura Canada and the Ont. Min. of Environment (M.O.E.). They were both taking a verbal and psychological bashing by informed citizens who had run out of patience with their decades long delay and intransigence. In the mindsets of polluters and corrupt politicians mere telling of the hard to hear truth equates with rudeness, terrorism and bullying .
Why right now would Woolwich politicians be having regrets? Simple. In good times when everyone was bragging about both the quantity and quality of the water supply here, nobody was too upset that K-W had a pipeline supplying water going up to Elmira. Now during major concerns over the quantity of water available to the cities especially, many will soon if not already resent water being pumped north. Why they wonder shouldn't it be being pumped south to the high population cities?
It won't surprise me if Lanxess Canada and the M.O.E. don't cook up a batch of silly juice and try to sell it as complying with requests and demands for water to go from the townships to the cities. Of course the "silly juice" that these two misanthropes cook up could really be something else again. Have you ever tasted water imbued with NDMA, chlorobenzene and a little more? We in Elmira have but it won't hold a candle to water enhanced with NDMA, chlorobenzene, ammonia, dioxins, polyaromatic hydrocarbons, toluene, benzene and multiple chlorinated solvents. Try it you'll like it! Trust your government all the way to the grave.
I will no longer be carrying Harry Potter licensed merchandise in my booth. This has been something that has weighed heavily with me since 2019 when I first learned of the author’s views*.
My first thought was to destroy the merchandise I had; but I do recognize the impact the books have had on some people and, they still hold the story very dearly in their hearts. To these fans, I do want to offer the merchandise I have at a significant discount. And by that I mean a lot purchase with a deadline. If it has not sold by the end of April, the lot will be destroyed, not donated.
March 31st, I will post all the images of the items in the lot. If the price I set is not taken seriously by April 30th, I will take great pleasure in destroying the items.
I will list the lot on Facebook Marketplace and here on my site. Any shipping will be an extra charge. Really, I just want the stuff gone.
*She is actively using her platform and vast fortune to shape dangerous laws and policies that benefit her viewpoint but bring risk of violence and death to women and Trans women alike. She donated a Trans exclusionary women’s shelter to Scotland, even though Trans women are more at risk of deadlier violence than Cis women and are arguably more in need of shelter by being more vulnerable to the most extreme violence. She founded a charity, then funded two thirds of a goal under that charity to lobby a bathroom bill. A result of this bill passing was an increase of invasion of privacy transgressions and violence towards women, including the Cis women she claims to be a feminist advocate for. I have seen photos of one of her victims, a 19 year old Cis woman. The author has not looked at the direct result of the violence she has permitted men to have against women as they police women’s spaces with doxing and threats of violence. She advised taking photos of Trans women and posting them online to identify the men-in-women’s-spaces was the simple way to enforce the bathroom law. She posts transphobic tweets on her X account frequently. I could post more, but the rest is alleged.
For more than seventy years, the relationship between KW Habilitation and the Kinsmen Club of Kitchener‑Waterloo has shown what sustained community partnership can achieve. What began as a grassroots response to unmet needs has grown into one of the region’s most meaningful collaborations. A collaboration that has shaped services, created opportunities, and supported thousands of people and families.
Where It All BeganKW Habilitation’s roots stretch back to the 1950s, when a group of local parents came together to advocate for their children with developmental disabilities. At a time when community supports were scarce, these families believed deeply in education, opportunity, and inclusion.
Standing beside them from the very beginning were the KW Kinsmen. Through fundraising, volunteerism, and shared leadership, the Kinsmen helped turn early ideas into real, life‑changing programs. Their support was instrumental in opening the New Dawn School in 1958 and the McQuarrie School in the mid‑1960s: two foundational programs that offered education and day supports for children with special needs.
Building an Organization, TogetherWhen KW Habilitation was formally incorporated in July 1971, the Kinsmen were already deeply woven into its governance and growth. Their involvement helped establish several of the organization’s earliest and most influential services, including:
These services helped demonstrate something that remains true today: when people are supported to live and participate in their community, their quality of life flourishes.
The TV Auction: A Signature Act of ServicePerhaps the most iconic symbol of the Kinsmen’s commitment is the Annual Kinsmen TV Auction. What began as a creative fundraising idea in 1955, it has become a beloved community tradition—now in its 71st year.
Over the decades, the auction has:
Today, the auction continues to evolve with online bidding and modern broadcasting, but its spirit remains unchanged: community helping community.
A Partnership That Builds Homes…LiterallyMany people don’t realize the extraordinary depth of the Kinsmen’s investment in KW Habilitation. They have:
Their contributions, financial, practical, and personal, are worth millions of dollars to KW Habilitation. But their impact is far greater than any number can capture.
More Than History, A Shared FutureToday, KW Habilitation supports people across Waterloo Region through inclusive living, employment, early learning, and community participation supports. The KW Kinsmen continue to champion this work with unwavering generosity and a deep belief in inclusion.
This partnership is not simply part of our history, it is part of our identity. It is a living example of what is possible when organizations commit to one another over generations. Together, we have built something remarkable. And together, we will continue shaping a community where everyone belongs and participates.
The post KW Kinsmen – A Legacy of Community appeared first on KW Habilitation.
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Prompt – Day 30 – A journaling manifesto, prompt by Suleika Jaouad
I reach for the page like I am addressing an oracle. The oracle is my own hand, tracing letter shapes in a way that demands slowness, patience, craft, that organizes electrical impulses into shapes that speak of beauty, longing, love, loss.
I reach for the page like a lifeline. Give me news from the wilds of self, news I’m missing, can’t see, for all the humming noise in between, and the layers of self-protection.
I reach for the page like a friend, an old dear familiar faithful friend, who reflects back to me facets of my own being that I am reluctant or sometimes unable to see or appreciate.
I reach for the page like I’m practicing a religious rite. I rarely think anymore with fear about its blankness, nor fear of putting down the “wrong” thing, committing an error. Practice has disciplined me to accept and admire whatever appears — because existence, life, is a miracle.
I reach for the page as a tonic, to soothe my rage, or reframe it, recast my judgement in these softening lines and curves, so that it lives somewhere apart from me, and I am not denying or accusing it, but merely giving it a place to reside where its harm — the harm that is my judgement — may rest and not be wielded. I lay down my pain here, on the page, so that I may live more fully as I hope to in the world, with humility, with kindness, and without the imposition of my needs unexpressed and otherwise unknown to me. The page accepts all of these, uncovers and grants ease, soaks the wounds — my wounds — in salt water that somehow, by some miracle, lessens the sting while healing.
xo, Carrie
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Read full story for latest details.As we wrapped up the final quarter of 2025, there was a strong sense of pride across Our Farm. After one of our longest and most productive seasons to date, autumn and early winter gave us time to reflect on everything we accomplished and to start looking ahead to another exciting year of growth.
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ A Strong Finish to an Exceptional SeasonThe last months of 2025 were all about momentum. Our weekly Wednesday Markets continued right through December to the end of February 2026, ensuring fresh, affordable vegetables remained available to our community well beyond the traditional growing season. Thanks to the cooler purchased in 2024, we were able to store field crops longer and maintain high-quality produce for market pickups. This support was especially important as grocery prices continue to rise.
Community connection remained a highlight through the fall. Corporate volunteer groups and individual volunteers continued to assist with trail maintenance, garden care, and wrap-up tasks, contributing to over 600 volunteer hours pledged throughout the year. Their support helped keep the farm welcoming, accessible, and thriving right through the season’s close.
In 2025, we grew an incredible $59,327.04 worth of produce! That’s an increase of more than $12,500 from 2024. We also celebrated the impact Our Farm was able to make beyond our own organization. Regular donations of produce continued to support community partners and by the end of the year, Our Farm had donated $5,667.95 worth of food to the Waterloo Region community, something we are so proud of.
As the fields quieted and tools were stored away, it was clear that every goal we set for 2025 had been accomplished. From increased production to major infrastructure improvements, it truly was a year that exceeded expectations.
Looking Ahead: What’s Growing in 2026While 2025 may be behind us, planning for 2026 is already well underway and the excitement is building.
Seed orders are complete, crop plans are taking shape, and new projects are being developed across our sites. Building on last year’s success, we are looking forward to another season of abundant harvests, strong markets, and continued learning for our team through professional development opportunities and on-farm innovation.
Our Veggie Boxes will be Back!We’re planning our third season offering veggie box subscriptions for 17 weeks over the summer! If you want to be in the loop when that goes on sale, please sign up for Our Farm Updates here!
The post An Update from Our Farm appeared first on KW Habilitation.
Life feels easier within the comfort of your home.
Hot tea is always within reach. There’s no pressure to look a certain way. No forced small talk. No subtle tension when a manager walks by.
It feels… lighter.
But behind the screen, something quieter is happening.
Your chances of standing out are shrinking. Your exposure to how workplaces actually function is fading. And slowly, almost invisibly, your attitude toward growth begins to soften.
At a stage where growth should be intentional, comfort takes over.
No commute.
No conference rooms.
No overheard conversations.
No one tapping your shoulder to say, “Hey, quick thing…”
On the surface, it feels efficient. Even comfortable.
But if you’re a new engineer who has never experienced an in-person workplace, there’s something important you might not realize.
It's understanding what remote work quietly removes—and what you need to rebuild intentionally.
When you work from home, your tasks are usually well-defined:
You get comfortable executing.
But in an office, something else happens in parallel:
You overhear why decisions are made, you see disagreements unfold, and you notice who influences what and how.
That ambient exposure builds context.
Without it, your growth can become narrow:
You would often be clear on what to do, but not always why it matters.
And over time, that gap grows and shows.
Comfort Quietly Reduces VisibilityIn an office, visibility happens passively:
In remote setups, none of that exists by default.
Your work doesn’t travel unless you make it travel.
So even if you’re doing good work, it can remain invisible—not because people don’t care, but because they’re busy; they’re not in your day-to-day catch-up calls, and you're not in their line of sight
This can lead to a frustrating feeling: “I’m working hard, but no one seems to notice.”
And visibility gap slowly creeps in
Communication Is No Longer OptionalIn a physical office, you can compensate for weak communication by clarifying things in person and reading expressions in real time.
Remote work removes those safety nets.
Now your thinking is judged by the following:
If your communication is unclear, your work appears unclear—even if your thinking is solid.
This accelerates something many engineers only learn later:
Clarity is not optional. It’s part of your job.
You Miss Informal Feedback LoopsIn offices, feedback is often subtle in the form of a quick correction at your desk, a casual “this approach might not scale," or a 2-minute post-meeting comment
These are low-pressure, high-frequency signals.
Remote work replaces them with:
Which means:
Feedback becomes less frequent but more loaded
By the time you hear it, it often feels heavier than it should.
And if you’re not proactive in asking, you might not get enough of it at all.
Your Network Stays Smaller Than You ThinkOne of the most underrated parts of early career growth is
Who knows you—and how they know you
In offices, relationships form organically:
Remote work reduces interactions to
Scheduled calls with specific agendas
Which means you might only know the following:
And that’s it.
This limits:
Not immediately, but over time.
So What Should You Do About It?This is not a disadvantage you’re stuck with.
But it is one you need to actively compensate for.
A few shifts make a significant difference:
1. Make your work visible
Not for attention — for alignment.
2. Ask for context, not just tasks
Don’t stop at “what needs to be done."
Ask:
This builds depth.
3. Speak—even if briefly
You don’t need to dominate meetings.
But:
Presence matters.
4. Create your own feedback loops
Don't wait for formal reviews.
Ask:
Small, frequent feedback compounds.
5. Build connections intentionally
Message people.
Schedule short calls.
Be curious about their work.
It may feel unnatural at first, but it replaces what the office would have done for you.
Final ThoughtStarting your career remotely isn’t a disadvantage.
But it is a different game.
Early growth isn’t just about output.
It's about context, communication, visibility, and relationships.
In an office, these come to you.
In remote work, you have to build them yourself.
And the sooner you realize that,
The faster you close the gap between doing the job
and actually growing in it.
How to Grow Faster While Working from Home was originally published in Code Like A Girl on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
Or put a little differently by Samantha Lernout of Citizens for Safe Groundwater "I've lost complete faith in their ability to manage water". This comment is in Luisa D'Amato's Opinion piece in today's K-W Record titled "Anger deepens in Wilmot over water". Personally I would suggest that while the Region of Waterloo have a long history of saying the right things publicly and indeed of some innovative planning decisions over the decades nevertheless when push comes to shove regional councillors are and always have been a bunch of environmentally illiterate twits with a self-serving fascination for money, power, authority, economic growth at ALL costs and legacy projects. This is why I worry that they will latch onto the Lake Erie pipeline just like native born leeches latch onto their prey.
Apparently to date the Region have not shared groundwater elevation levels (i.e. metres above sea level-masl) with local councils. What a great way to keep everybody else in the dark while you make up your own numbers. The report on the groundwater elevations for the Wilmot Centre Wellfield has been delayed until April 8/26. Even then the fibbing has not yet ceased as the region apparently still claim that the surreptitious pumping of Wilmot's water since 2019 was only for "testing" purposes. I'm thinking that if I ever get caught robbing a bank my excuse will be that I was only "testing" their security. See how far that gets me.
Another article by Bill Jackson titled "Waterloo Region asks for provincial moratorium on water-taking permits" advises that the Motion put forth a month or so ago by a regional councillor (Barry Vrbanovic?) has actually been passed. That Motion was to direct 50% of all new water capacity to support new development in the region. Geez does that not make abundantly clear how weakly regional councillors prioritize water for everybody over more profits for the development and building industries? That Motion is a direct result of lobbying by those industries and how quickly councillors respond to them versus to all the rest of us who really by now just want to flush our politicians down the toilet if only we had the water to do so.
Ngozi Ukazu’s 2025 Flip is a stand-alone fantasy graphic novel.
If they’ve noticed Chi-Chi Ekeh at all, the Nigerian-American’s fellow students might describe her as a scholarship student amid the hordes of rich kids, as one of the few persons of colour at an almost all-white school1, or as a bright but extremely anxious nobody.
After her promposal to hunky Flip Henderson, classmates will have no trouble remembering Chi-Chi.
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When: Sunday May 3rd, 2 – 3:30 pm
Meeting Point: Victoria Park Clock Tower, 79 Joseph St, Kitchener, ON N2G 1J2
Walk Leader: Siming Wu
Have you ever wondered what happens when rain hits the streets of Kitchener? Where does it go? Beneath our feet lies a fascinating network of pipes, drains, creeks, and infrastructure quietly working to keep the city running.
Join us for a short urban exploration walk where we’ll uncover the hidden systems beneath Kitchener. As we stroll through downtown and nearby parks, we’ll look at everyday things—storm drains, creeks, manholes, and historic buildings—and reveal the invisible networks that connect them.
When: Sunday May 3rd, 2 – 3:30 pm
Meeting Point: Veterans Green, Beech Street at Hazel Street
Walk Leader: Michael Druker, Phil Marfisi
Waterloo’s Northdale neighbourhood is undergoing a rare transformation from a mid-century suburb to an urban, pedestrian-oriented mixed-use district. We will share what led to the master planned upzoning and how well it is working. As we walk through the neighbourhood, we’ll note features of different urban planning eras and novel aspects of city building not found elsewhere in the region, and discuss lessons for urban intensification.
The walk will end near a bubble tea shop for anyone who wants to continue the conversation.
When: Saturday May 2nd, 2 – 3 pm
Meeting Point: Corner of Lucan Avenue and Roger Street
Walk Leader: Susan Marchiori
This walk is for families and other interested in discussing how playgrounds contribute to community building.
In the past Conestoga Rovers (CRA), on behalf of Uniroyal Chemical, Crompton & Chemtura, were accused of writing Conclusions and Recommendations to reports that simply did not reflect the data and findings of those reports. In other words CRA would cherry pick items here and there within the reports of little significance and arbitrarily pretend to believe that they had far more weight and significance than they did. This was but one of their methods during DNAPL studies done in the late 1980s and early 1990s. They were actually accused by a consultant (CH2M HILL) for the Region of Waterloo of intentionally sampling for DNAPLS in the least likely locations to find them and then claiming "see there aren't any DNAPLS here."
Similarly monthly Progress Reports showing reduced on-site pumping might be acknowledged as a temporary mechanical breakdown easily fixed yet month after month and year after year the trend continued to decrease. Also there was never any acknowledgement of public verbal promises made by Chemtura staff regarding the Tripling of off-site groundwater pumping in the monthly Progress Reports. Neither a tripling nor even a Doubling ever occurred and yet not a peep in those monthly reports as they bragged about exceeding their old off-site Target pumping rate by five or six litres per second (i.e. from 53 l/sec to 58 l/sec).
Now Lanxess continued that fine tradition with their Risk Assessment (RA) of the Canagagigue Creek. Apparently they can manipulate various assumptions throughout the RA process in order to conclude that despite many, many exceedances of health criteria for multiple contaminants both in Creek sediments and soils; not to fuss as the RA claimed "...no unacceptable risks...". There were also issues with floodplain soils as well and don't get me started on amateurish sampling of Creek sediments using shovels instead of professional core samplers. Along with these polluter self-serving failures were the locational sampling biases that failed to properly sample the majority of the five miles of downstream Canagagigue Creek all the way to the Grand River.
All in all unethical and dishonest junk science, psuedo science and wishful thinking science alone will not succeed. It also takes a combination of either stupidity, laziness or dishonesty by sitting politicians at the municipal, regional and provincial levels. Woolwich Township and Waterloo Region, fortunately for polluters, are blessed with an abundance of these.
".. it doesn't take much for a woman to be called insane, or hysterical. And all it takes is the wrong doctor, one who thinks sending her away will solve the problem."
"These women were so used to being ignored and forgotten when they weren't being punished and shamed. They'd internalized it to the point where the idea of anyone in power caring about their quality of life, or whether they lived or died at all, was not only foreign, but ludicrous."
"Because it's always a lack of options that hangs women, in the end."
The Northern Alberta Business Incubator (NABI) is seeking applications from individuals interested in serving on its Board of Directors.
NABI operates as a not-for-profit organization governed by a volunteer Board of Directors responsible for strategic guidance, governance, and financial oversight.
NABI is recruiting approximately five (5) to six (6) Directors. The Board is also seeking a candidate with strong financial expertise who may be positioned to assume the role of Treasurer as part of the Board’s succession planning.
Directors are appointed for one, two or three-year terms and play a critical role in guiding the strategic direction and governance of the organization.
For more than three decades, NABI has supported entrepreneurs and small businesses across Northern Alberta by providing incubation space, mentorship, programming, and connections that accelerate business growth.
NABI’s vision is to be a collaborative business incubator that empowers startups and local businesses through knowledge, resources, and strategic connections, driving innovation and regional economic growth.
Through its programs, partnerships, and entrepreneurial community, NABI supports companies as they build sustainable businesses and scale their impact.
Role of the BoardThe Board of Directors provides strategic oversight and governance leadership for NABI.
Working collaboratively with the Executive Director, the Board:
Board members contribute their expertise, perspectives, and networks to support NABI’s mission and strategic priorities.
Board Recruitment Priorities (2026–27)To support Board renewal and organizational priorities, NABI is seeking candidates who can contribute expertise in the following areas:
NABI values a Board composed of diverse professional backgrounds, perspectives, and lived experiences.
Desired Skills and ExperienceCandidates may bring experience in areas such as:
Candidates should also demonstrate:
Board members are expected to:
The anticipated commitment is up to 10 hours per month, including Board and committee participation.
Application ProcessNABI is committed to maintaining a Board with the skills, perspectives, and experiences required to guide the organization effectively.
Interested applicants are invited to submit:
Applications may be submitted by April 17, 2026 to: emilie@nabi.ca
The post Northern Alberta Business Incubator (NABI) appeared first on Capacity Canada.
As the snow begins to melt and flowers start to bloom, Ontario homeowners know that spring comes with its own set of challenges…especially when it comes to managing the clutter and mess the seasons bring. A well-designed mudroom isn’t just a functional space; it’s a game-changer for keeping your Kitchener-Waterloo home organized, clean, and welcoming.
Why Your Mudroom Matters in Ontario HomesIn regions like Kitchener-Waterloo, mudrooms act as a buffer between the outdoors and your living space. From wet winter boots to muddy spring raincoats, this transition area helps protect your floors, keeps your home organized, and makes everyday routines easier for the whole family.
Here are some features that help you have a functioning mudroom, and tips for homes without a dedicated mudroom space.
Essential Mudroom Features ♦1.Durable Flooring – Choose water- and dirt-resistant materials like ceramic tile or luxury vinyl that can withstand wet boots and muddy paws.
2. Ample Storage – Incorporate cubbies, hooks, and built-in benches with hidden storage. This keeps shoes, coats, and sports gear neatly organized.
3. Seating Area – A bench or seating area makes it easy to put on or remove shoes, especially for kids or seniors.
4. Hooks and Racks – Wall-mounted hooks for coats, hats, and umbrellas keep items off the floor and easy to grab on busy mornings.
5. Drop Zones – Consider small baskets or trays for keys, mail, and everyday essentials. It reduces clutter and keeps items in one convenient location.
Transitioning Your Mudroom From Winter to Spring ♦ Winter Prep:With bulky outerwear and lots of snow making its way into the house, Winter presents its own set of challenges. Here are some mudroom tips to help you overcome some common issues.
Although the coats may be thinner, Springtime is no stranger to wet clothing and moisture making its way inside. Switch over your mudroom to get ready for Spring.
With these thoughtful additions and seasonal adjustments, your mudroom can stay functional and organized year-round, making everyday life smoother for your family while protecting your home from the mess of Ontario weather.
No Mudroom? Make Your Foyer WorkEven if your home doesn’t have a dedicated mudroom, you can still create an organized and functional entryway:
With a few smart additions, even a foyer can function like a mini-mudroom, keeping your home clean, organized, and ready for Ontario’s unpredictable weather.
Looking for more organization tips? Check out these articles.When you list your home in Kitchener-Waterloo, you might focus on square footage, upgrades, or the age of the roof. But when buyers walk through the front door, their first impressions are often shaped by something much simpler: how the home feels.
Whether they’re relocating for a job at the University of Waterloo, upsizing in Laurelwood, or buying their first place near Uptown, buyers tend to notice the same key things right away.
Here’s what stands out most during a showing and how you can use it to your advantage.
Tip: If you have questions about what you can do to make your home appeal to buyers in this market, let us help! Give us a call.
1. Curb Appeal (Before They Even Walk In)First impressions start at the street.
From established neighbourhoods in Waterloo to family-friendly areas in Kitchener, buyers are already forming opinions as they pull into the driveway.
They notice:
Even in a competitive market, buyers are drawn to homes that look cared for. A tidy exterior signals that the inside has likely been maintained as well.
Tip: Power wash the walkway, trim shrubs, and consider a fresh coat of paint on the front door. Small updates create a strong emotional impact.
2. Smell and Air QualityIt’s immediate and impossible to ignore.
Lingering cooking odours, pet smells, heavy perfumes, or mustiness can instantly change how a buyer feels about a home. In contrast, clean, neutral air makes a space feel fresh and move-in ready.
Buyers touring multiple properties in one afternoon will quickly compare homes based on this subtle but powerful factor.
Tip: Open windows before showings (weather permitting), avoid heavy air fresheners, and ensure carpets and upholstery are freshly cleaned.3.
3. Natural LightBuyers love bright spaces.
When touring homes across Waterloo Region, one of the first things buyers do is look toward the windows. They notice:
Natural light makes rooms feel larger and more inviting.
Tip: Open all curtains and blinds, clean windows inside and out, and turn on lights in darker rooms, even during the day.
4. Overall Condition and CleanlinessBefore buyers start evaluating layout or finishes, they subconsciously assess upkeep.
They notice:
A well-maintained home feels reassuring. Buyers interpret cleanliness as a sign that the property has been responsibly cared for.
Tip: Deep clean beyond surface-level tidying. Pay special attention to kitchens, bathrooms, and entryways.
5. The Layout and FlowOnce the emotional first impression settles in, buyers begin assessing functionality.
In neighbourhoods popular with growing families, buyers often look for:
They’ll mentally place their furniture and imagine their daily routines.
If rooms feel cramped or awkward, buyers notice immediately.
Tip: Rearrange furniture to highlight space and flow. Remove excess pieces to make rooms feel larger.
6. The KitchenThe kitchen can potentially seal the deal.
Buyers quickly evaluate:
Even if a kitchen isn’t brand new, cleanliness and good lighting go a long way. In many Kitchener-Waterloo homes, updated kitchens are a major value driver.
7. Storage SpaceClosets get opened. Always.
Buyers want to know:
Overstuffed closets suggest a lack of space, even if square footage is adequate.
Tip: Remove at least 25–30% of items from closets before listing.
8. Signs of Major Maintenance IssuesBuyers are trained (and often advised by their agents) to look for red flags like:
They may not be inspectors, but they’re watching closely.
Being proactive about small repairs before listing can prevent negative assumptions.
9. The Emotional Factor: “Can I See Myself Living Here?”Above all, buyers notice how a home makes them feel.
When a space feels clean, bright, and well cared for, buyers can imagine:
That emotional connection is often what turns a showing into an offer.
Thinking of Selling in Kitchener-Waterloo?Understanding what buyers notice first can help you prioritize updates that truly matter.
If you’re considering listing your home in Kitchener or Waterloo or the surrounding area, we’d be happy to walk through your property and identify the small changes that can make a big impact.
The right first impression can make all the difference. Contact us today.
Charles Platt’s 1991 The Silicon Man is a stand-alone science fiction novel.
In the centrally planned America of 2030, Rosalind French is a researcher for defence contractor North Industries. She is in charge of the LifeScan project. FBI James Bayley thinks French might have another role, as a criminal bilking the American government of hard-taxed money.
While Bayley isn’t wrong, he has omitted another role French will embrace if necessary: cold-blooded killer.
Spoiler warning.
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♦
A guide to how modern software handles multiple tasks — with diagrams, code, and zero hand-waving.
Continue reading on Code Like A Girl »
♦
And how to choose one.
Continue reading on Code Like A Girl »
I had my baby in 2023. Like most new parents, I had a plan. I’d take a year of parental leave, master the art of soothing a tiny human, and then slide back into my Frontend Engineer seat like I’d never left.
Spoiler alert: Parenthood had other plans.It turns out that raising a human is significantly harder than debugging a complex state management issue. My “village” was thousands of miles away, and between the nightmare of tourist visa hurdles and the sheer exhaustion of toddler life, I realized one year wasn’t enough. I needed more time. I extended my leave until my daughter turned two, finally feeling like I had a handle on things.
By November 2025, I was ready. I had the “The Plan” finalized:
I was ready to rejoin the tech world. But instead plans went upside down.
The “Stuck in 2023” FeelingFor a few days, I was in shock. While I was focused on developmental milestones and nursery rhymes, the tech world had moved at warp speed. Suddenly, everything was AI-this and AI-that. I felt like I had stepped out of a time machine.
I had a choice: accept that my career gap was a “game over” screen, or treat this like a massive technical debt project that needed a serious refactor. I chose to be a fighter.
If you’re currently staring at a career gap or a sudden layoff, here is how I’m navigating my “relaunch” (because, let’s be honest, it’s a marathon, not a sprint).
My “Relaunch” PlaybookTo the companies looking at candidates like me: If you see a career gap, please judge us on our technical skills today, not our time away. If we can’t pass the technical bar, fair enough. But don’t reject a “fighter” just because they took time to raise a human.
The determination it takes to relaunch a career after a gap is the same determination you want in an Engineer when the production server goes down at 2 AM.
Final ThoughtsI am still looking. I haven’t reached the destination yet, but I’ve taken the first steps. To anyone else trying to relaunch: hang on tight. The journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step — and maybe a few cups of very strong coffee.
We are getting close. I know I am.
Find me on LinkedIn here: bhagya-krishna
♦The Career Gap Myth: Why a “Fighter” is the Best Engineer You Can Hire. was originally published in Code Like A Girl on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
I failed my first driving test. I was sitting at a T-junction, completely missed a car crossing the intersection, and nearly T-boned it.
It’s been 20 years, but I remember the hot rush of anger, disappointment and embarrassment vividly. But ever since that day, I have been hyper-vigilant at intersections. That single, glaring failure made me a safe driver for two decades. Was the sting worth it? Absolutely.
♦Years later, I experienced a very different kind of crash.
As a Product Manager, I led the launch for a new platform. On paper, it was an engineering masterpiece. It worked brilliantly and solved a massive technical headache. The only problem? It required a migration effort from product teams who were already drowning in their own roadmaps. Nobody had the time to adopt it.
It was a classic PM failure. I built a flawless solution for a reality my users didn’t live in.
Failures — whether you’re behind the wheel or driving a product roadmap — are the ultimate forcing function for growth. They provide the brutal, honest data we need to course-correct. But getting the feedback required to actually learn from those failures? That’s where things get complicated.
The Sting of Feedback and the Gender GapNegative feedback is just an organization’s way of flagging a bug in your strategy or behavior. Personally, I love it. It’s highly actionable and motivates me to iterate.
But biologically, our brains hate it. We are wired to register criticism as a threat, which is why our default instinct is to avoid it. And if you are a woman in tech, that natural avoidance is heavily amplified by a very real double standard.
You don’t need a research paper to know this, though plenty of studies back it up: when something goes wrong, women tend to internalize the blame, while men often point to external factors. We also know that women in leadership — especially in male-dominated arenas like product and engineering — are penalized more harshly for mistakes.
When the penalty for failure is higher, you naturally become risk-averse. Which is pure poison for innovation.
Why Radical Candor is the AntidoteHere is where the double standard really hurts us. Women are often expected to be “cuddly” rather than assertive. This expectation infects the feedback loop. Managers, terrified of causing offense or dealing with emotions, will default to the “feedback sandwich” or just shield their employees from hard truths entirely.
Let’s be clear: when managers withhold honest feedback, they are actively sabotaging their team’s growth.
This is why I swear by Kim Scott’s concept of Radical Candor. It cuts straight through the corporate nonsense. The framework relies on two simple pillars: Care Personally and Challenge Directly.
The mandate is simple: just be honest. No fluff. If someone is doing something that isn’t working, tell them.
We do this in our personal lives all the time. You probably wouldn’t hesitate to call out a partner or a sibling for a bad decision because they know you care about them. We need to bring that exact same energy to our stand-ups and 1:1s.
Putting Radical Candor into PracticeWhen you are navigating the fallout of a failure, here is how to keep the focus on growth:
Failure isn’t the end of the road. It’s the guardrail that keeps you on the track.
Whether you’re navigating a blind intersection or trying to convince exhausted engineers to migrate to a new tool, the goal was never to be perfect. The goal is to get the radically candid feedback you need so you can drive a little better tomorrow.
♦Embracing Failure as a Path for Growth was originally published in Code Like A Girl on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
An underrated skill that helps you grow faster than you think
♦Photo by Brett Jordan on UnsplashEgo in the workplace is often misunderstood.
Most advice reduces it to something simplistic: “stay humble,” “don’t take things personally,” or “leave your ego at the door.” In reality, none of this is practical. Ego is not a switch you can turn off—it's a byproduct of ambition, competence, and self-awareness.
The real challenge is not eliminating ego but managing it in an environment that constantly tests it.
This article breaks down the less obvious realities of ego in corporate settings—and how to handle them without hurting your growth.
1. Ego is Triggered More by Perception Than RealityIn corporate environments, your ego reacts less to what actually happens and more to how you interpret what happens.
For example:
These interpretations feel real, but they’re often incomplete.
Corporate environments are noisy:
Not every negative signal is a judgment of your capability.
Practical shift:2. Effort and Recognition Are Weakly Correlated
Pause before reacting. Ask, "What are 2–3 alternative explanations for this situation?”
This single habit reduces unnecessary ego-driven reactions.
One of the biggest sources of ego friction is the assumption that effort directly leads to recognition.
In reality, recognition depends on
Two people can put in equal effort and receive very different outcomes.
If your ego is tied to effort alone, you will feel consistently undervalued.
Practical shift:3. Being “Right” Is Often Less Valuable Than Being “Effective”
Treat visibility and communication as part of the work—not as self-promotion, but as delivery.
Ego strongly attaches to correctness.
You may find yourself thinking:
However, corporate decisions are rarely made on correctness alone. They involve trade-offs across:
Insisting on being right—without considering context—can slow you down.
Practical shift:
Before pushing a point, evaluate:
Does this materially change the outcome?
Is this the right forum to push this?
What is the cost of insisting vs aligning?
Effectiveness > correctness.4. Feedback Feels Personal Because Ego Links Work to Identity
Even neutral feedback can feel like a personal attack:
Ego translates this into
This is where many professionals stagnate—not due to lack of skill, but due to defensiveness.
Practical shift:
Create a separation:
You = long-term capability
Your work = current output
Feedback targets the second, not the first.5. Silence in Meetings Is Interpreted—Whether You Like It or Not
Many professionals withdraw when their ego takes a hit:
But silence has a cost.
In most corporate settings:
Practical shift:
You don’t need to speak often, but you need to speak intentionally:
Summarize key points
Ask clarifying questions
State your position briefly
This maintains presence without overcompensating.6. Comparison Is the Default—But It’s Also Misleading
Ego constantly compares:
The problem is—you don’t see the full picture:
Comparison without context leads to distorted conclusions.
Practical shift:7. Recognition Is Delayed—Sometimes Significantly
Convert comparison into analysis:
Instead of: “Why them?”
Ask: “What are they doing differently that I can learn from?”
Corporate growth is rarely immediate.
There is often a lag between:
During this lag, ego becomes restless:
Many people change direction too early because they expect instant validation.
Practical shift:
Track internal metrics:
Quality of decisions
Clarity of communication
Complexity of problems handled
These compound—even when recognition doesn’t.8. Strong Ego Is Useful—Uncontrolled Ego Is Not
It’s important to make a distinction:
You don’t need less ego.
You need a better-regulated ego.
Ego in corporate environments is not a flaw—it's a signal.
It highlights:
Ignoring it doesn’t work. Suppressing it doesn’t last.
The advantage comes from understanding how it operates—and building systems to manage it:
Because in the end, career growth is not just about skill.
It’s about how well you handle the internal friction that comes with it.
♦How to Manage Ego in Corporate — That No One Tells You was originally published in Code Like A Girl on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.