The National - News

One can make all the difference

Fujairah Government’s happiness and positivity officer lives and loves her job, she takes her upbeat ethos into each day and hopes that example will help inspire her colleagues, Ruba Haza reports

- Rhaza@thenationa­l.ae

FUJAIRAH // It’s not that common to find a job where the primary goal is simply to make people happy, but that is exactly the position Hessa Al Falasi finds herself in.

Partly through the pleasure she gets from volunteeri­ng and also her affable demeanour, the 36-year-old Emirati proved to be the ideal candidate to take up the position of chief happiness and positivity officer at Fujairah Government at the start of the year. The former English teacher says she has her mind set on one goal – “making a difference in people’s lives”.

“It fills me with joy when someone tells me how much of a difference I made in their lives,” says Ms Al Falasi. “I try every day and encourage them to do so.”

The main thrust of her job is to initiate and oversee happiness and positivity programmes and activities in Fujairah Government in coordinati­on with the Office of the Minister of State for Happiness. She got to the position after joining the Happiness Officer Programme in August last year.

“My volunteer work in translatio­n and organising events was one of the main reasons to be nominated,” she says. “We started the intensive course in September and it was a life-changing experience for me. The people I met there changed me before I could use the informatio­n to change the work environmen­t around me.

“We learnt about the science of happiness, mindfulnes­s, making public policies for a happier community, measuring happiness and how to make work a happy environmen­t that supports innovation and nurtures talents and difference­s.

”I really believe that I have to be a role model. Change is not easy and people will not all embrace positivity and we have to respect that. However, if you model happiness and positivity, it will start spreading and people will start doing the same.”

Ms Al Falasi started in January by targeting employees at the Emiri Court, where she worked as a translator. She encouraged them to define goals for themselves and to find meaning and purpose in the work they do.

“We also focused on health and fitness, on fun activities and celebratin­g employees’ special occasions and small achievemen­ts like birthdays, weddings and, with time, other department­s in the government started asking us about our activities and copying them,” she says.

Ms Al Falasi has a master’s degree in teaching English and a bachelor’s degree in English language and translatio­n. Her first job was as an English teacher for children in Grades 7 and 8.

“Working as an English teacher at the beginning of my career in 2004 helped me develop skills, such as self-control, caring for others, transferri­ng and sharing knowledge, and that played a huge role in shaping me into the person that I am today,” she says.

In 2011, she became a translator at the Emiri Court, where she developed her skills and currently holds the position of director of technical support, alongside the chief happiness position.

“I found meaning and purpose in what I do and that was always what drove me to give more,” Ms Al Falasi says. Her mother and grandmothe­r were the big influences in her life. “My mum has a very positive way of looking at the world. She really believes that things will turn out OK, and she believes in the goodness of people and so much of that way of thinking has been passed on to me,” she says.

“My grandmothe­r also taught me to always smile. She always says: ‘ No matter what you’re going through, keep a positive front; people don’t need to see your sadness, share only your smile and, with time, you yourself will also feel better’.”

 ?? Antonie Robertson / The National ?? Hessa Al Falasi says her mother and grandmothe­r are hugely inspiratio­nal figures in her life and work.
Antonie Robertson / The National Hessa Al Falasi says her mother and grandmothe­r are hugely inspiratio­nal figures in her life and work.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates