This submit was authored by Priyanshi R., a technical intern on the IIoT Staff.
I didn’t anticipate one thing so simple as rolling cotton to stick with me the best way it did.
Once I signed up for the World Most cancers Day volunteering session with Cisco’s Most cancers Help Community Inclusive Group (what we name ERGs) and Karunashraya, a neighborhood hospice belief, I assumed it could be a superb break from work, a chance to do one thing significant, and an opportunity to come back again feeling a bit of lighter. However someplace in the course of it, that expectation shifted. What started as a easy volunteer exercise reworked into one thing a lot deeper — a quiet, however lasting shift in perspective.


We had been sitting collectively, engaged on cotton balls, gauze pads, and small medical kits. The method was easy: roll, alter, place it apart, and start once more. At first, it felt virtually mechanical, like several repetitive process you’re simply attempting to get proper. However then, in a small, unremarkable second, I paused and checked out what I had made in my hand, and one thing about it stayed.

That small piece of cotton would finally attain somebody. Somebody who is likely to be in ache. Somebody going via one thing heavy and unsure in methods I don’t absolutely perceive. That thought didn’t move rapidly; it lingered, creating intention within the routine motions. And in that second, I spotted how simply we underestimate the smallest issues till they develop into all somebody has in a troublesome second. From there, every bit I labored on carried that quiet sense of that means.
What made the expertise much more highly effective was the room itself. Nobody needed to be there, however everybody selected to be. I felt it of their focus, endurance, and method they confirmed up. At that second, it didn’t really feel like a office, however it didn’t really feel like an “occasion” both. We had been a bunch of individuals, from interns like me to leaders from all corners of the corporate, who got here collectively quietly and sincerely, devoted to one thing that mattered.
That’s when the shift grew to become clear. The volunteering I initially seen as a break in my day was a strong second of human connection. There’s additionally part of this expertise we’ll by no means see, like who receives these kits or what sort of day they’re having after they do. We gained’t hear their tales or witness the affect immediately. And but, in a method, that made it much more significant. It jogged my memory that a number of the most essential issues we do usually are not at all times those we get to see via to the tip. Generally, the worth lies merely in exhibiting up and contributing.
That’s what makes social affect initiatives like this at Cisco so significant. Influence is often measured in scale, visibility, and numbers, however this expertise jogged my memory that care, dignity, and the willingness to dedicate your time to one thing seemingly small matter deeply to another person. A lot of our time at work is structured round conferences, deadlines, and deliverables. Moments like this strip all of that away, permitting you to see individuals past their roles — their thoughtfulness, endurance, and presence. And by some means, that makes coming again to work really feel extra human.

This wasn’t nearly one occasion or at some point. It was about being a part of a spot that creates area for moments like these, the place doing one thing small, quietly and sincerely, issues simply as a lot because the work in our job descriptions. Cisco really encourages us to step outdoors our every day roles and put money into our communities, and having that help makes all of the distinction.
What I carry ahead from that day isn’t simply the reminiscence of what we made, however the feeling of how we made it with endurance, consideration, and intent. That stays. And possibly that’s the actual affect of days like this: they stick with you lengthy after the desk is cleared, quietly altering the best way you take a look at work, at individuals, and at what it means to actually contribute.
Try extra intern and early profession tales on the WeAreCisco Weblog.