In preparing, formulating and filing a Federal Disability Retirement application under FERS or CSRS, it is often difficult to maintain an objective perspective on one’s own case, precisely because of the intimate knowledge, relationship, and involvement one has with the particular medical conditions one suffers from.
Sometimes, of course, “maintaining an objective perspective” can backfire — where the argument made or the formulation of the applicant’s statement of disability, conveys little or no emotional undertone. But the opposite of that particular perspective is normally the case — where one’s own personal involvement and relationship to a case fails to state the facts, circumstances, medical elements and their relationship to one’s inability to perform one’s job, in a manner which is neither coherent nor relevant.
In preparing and formulating a Federal Disability Retirement application, the problem with a narrative involving one’s own medical condition is not because of its emotive content, for such emotional substance can often be effective in persuasive discourse; rather, the problem with it normally has to do with the coherence of the narrative itself.
Emotion is necessary for the conveyance of genuineness; only, don’t let the emotion get in the way of telling one’s story. For the true narrator tells the tale such that the audience feels the heart of the story, without ever knowing that the narration itself is the cause of the emotional upheaval.
Sincerely,
Robert R. McGill, Esquire
Filed under: Theory and Practice: Tips and Strategies for a Successful Application | Tagged: an effective federal disability retirement application, an emotional vs. reasoned personal account of disability, an understandable emotional response to an irrational fers disability decision, effective federal disability claim statement, federal disability law blog, FERS disability retirement, human emotions, integrity and objectivity in your federal disability retirement application, keeping emotions under control will help an opm disability applicant, legal effectiveness in government disability claims, Maintaining an Objective Perspective in a Disability Case, maintaining an objective perspective on your fers disability application, objective and subjective factors in your federal disability claim, objective language and evidence in the opm disability claim, opm disability and the right balance between some emotion and much more objectivity, OPM disability retirement, opm medical claim and giving effective medical arguments, postal service disability retirement, presenting a personal disability matter objectively, proving opm emotional disability, telling your emotional story from an opm disability attorney's perspective, the fine balance between rational and emotional factors, using some emotional content in your fers disability application, USPS disability retirement, writing an effective opm application memoranda |
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