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❤️ Love

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«وداع تنها از آنِ دل‌هایی است که عشق را در نگاه می‌جویند؛ اما آنان که با جان و دل مهر می‌ورزند، در قاموسِ محبت‌شان مفهومی به نامِ جدایی وجود ندارد.»

G.D

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پروردگارا، مرا از خوابِ نیستی فراخواندی، نه از سرِ ضرورت، بلکه تنها به اقتضای محبتِ بی‌کران و عظمتِ عشقِ خویش. اراده فرمودی تا آفریدگانی نیک‌سرشت و زیباپدید پدید آیند، و مرا پیش از آن‌که دیده به جهان بگشایم، در نهانخانه‌ی رحمِ مادرم، به نام خواندی. نَفَس و روشنایی و جنبش را به من ارزانی داشتی، و در هر لحظه از بودنم، همراه و همنشینِ گام‌هایم بودی. ای خدای شگفتی‌آفرینِ هستی، در حیرتم که چگونه به من التفات می‌کنی، و فراتر از آن، مرا عزیز می‌داری و در پناه مهر خویش می‌پروری. در جانم آن وفاداری را بیافرین که رضایتِ تو را برمی‌انگیزد؛ تا در همه‌ی روزگارِ زندگی، با اعتماد به تو زیستم و مشتاقِ حضورت مانم. آمین

What a man needs...

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Project Management’s Hardest Lesson - The Hidden Side of Project Management When Corporate Politics Runs the System

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Project Management’s Hardest Lesson - The Hidden Side of Project Management When Corporate Politics Runs the System By Abraham Zavala-Quinones / @AZQMX #PMP; Product Owner; Change Manager; & BSA If someone asked me today what project management is actually like, I don’t think I’d start with timelines, tools, or frameworks anymore. I’d probably start with the emotional side of it: you’re expected to create clarity when there genuinely isn’t any—and still look calm while doing it. Because over time, what surprised me most is how little of the job is “textbook PM.” A lot of it is managing ambiguity, unspoken expectations, shifting priorities that no one formally acknowledges, and translating between people who all use the same words but mean completely different things. Now add internal politics to that—and you get the reality many PMs live: Priorities shift with no formal acknowledgement, so the work absorbs change without anyone owning the tradeoff. Leadership believes t...

“CIRCLE BACK LATER—DELIVER NEVER: THE HIDDEN COST OF CORPORATE JARGON IN IT DELIVERY

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“CIRCLE BACK LATER—DELIVER NEVER: THE HIDDEN COST OF CORPORATE JARGON IN IT DELIVERY” By Abraham Zavala-Quinones  Sr. Director of IT | Libercam – Global IT Center & PMO https://www.linkedin.com/posts/abraham-zavala-quinones_circle-back-later-activity-7393140938337902592-a540?utm_source=share&utm_medium=member_desktop&rcm=ACoAAAJHskoBPB0x6rXX_gO1ss0xKh1qcCe3czA When Words Delay Work: How American Corporate Lingo Slows IT Projects After 28 years managing IT programs, I’ve learned that the biggest delays rarely come from code or scope—but from language. American corporate lingo, with its hyperbolic and vague expressions, creates the illusion of progress while silently eroding alignment and velocity. 10 Ways This Happens: 1)Ambiguous alignment: Terms like “synergy” or “digital transformation” sound powerful but lack measurable meaning. 2)Deferred decisions: “Let’s circle back” often replaces actual choices, elongating delivery cycles. 3)Diffuse accountability: P...

When Words Delay Work: How American Corporate Lingo Slows IT Projects

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When Words Delay Work: How American Corporate Lingo Slows IT Projects After 28 years managing IT programs, I’ve learned that the biggest delays rarely come from code or scope—but from language. American corporate lingo, with its hyperbolic and vague expressions, creates the illusion of progress while silently eroding alignment and velocity. 10 Ways This Happens: Ambiguous alignment: Terms like “synergy” or “digital transformation” sound powerful but lack measurable meaning. Deferred decisions: “Let’s circle back” often replaces actual choices, elongating delivery cycles. Diffuse accountability: Phrases like “shared ownership” blur responsibility boundaries. Semantic overload: Overuse of buzzwords increases cognitive load and fatigue in distributed teams. Translation loss: Non-native speakers struggle with idioms like “move the needle,” slowing global execution. Fake consensus: Teams nod to vague goals they interpret differently, leading to scope drift. Documentation inflati...

“The legacy of love never fades, even in the afterlife.”

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“The legacy of love never fades, even in the afterlife.” In every project, as in life, what truly endures is not the deadlines we met or the systems we built — it’s the human connection, the trust, and the shared purpose that remain long after delivery. This image, taken during Día de Muertos (celebrated every 1st and 2nd of November), reminds me that great leadership is about legacy — the kind that transcends milestones and merges logic with empathy. The afterlife, in this sense, mirrors every project’s closing phase: an opportunity to reflect on what was created, transformed, and left behind. The song “La Llorona” in Nahuatl embodies that timeless echo — grief and gratitude intertwined — reminding us that even when structures dissolve, meaning persists. In project management, as in culture, the greatest success lies not in permanence but in the legacy of value we leave for others to build upon. Because every initiative, every transformation, and every act of leadership is...