Reset Definition

Reset is the action of returning to normality with respect to an activity. In this way, if something temporarily stops working and later there is a return to the initial activity, there is a restoration.

Therefore, it can be appreciated that this term implies that there is a situation of change and transformation. In general terms, the process would be as follows: there is something that happens in a normalized way, then there is an absence of activity for some reason and, finally, comes the restoration, in which there is a restart of what has been abandoned. We apply this idea to a specific case, to a negotiation between employers and unions. After a period of dialogue to reach an agreement, one of the two parties decides to break the negotiation and when the dialogue resumes the situation is restored, indicating that the dialogue is resumed again.

In the media and in everyday language, people talk about restoring in various contexts: negotiations, personal disputes or even in the field of telephone services (the restoration of a service means that it can already be used after a period with some circumstance that prevented its use).

The restoration of health

When someone is sick, they need a series of care and attention. After medical treatment, the patient is still not one hundred percent recovered, as he needs to return to normality. This transition period between the end of a disease or illness and the return to daily activity is precisely the stage of restoration of health. The time that elapses in the full restoration of health depends on many factors, but in any case it is a concept closely associated with the recovery of the patient. In fact, doctors often specify the approximate time for full rehabilitation.

Some medical techniques are based on an immediate recovery of the patient (for example, cardiopulmonary resuscitation, also known by its acronym CPR and popularly called first aid)

The restoration of order

From a social perspective, events occur that alter the daily order (strikes, demonstrations or street riots). These actions can cause damage to urban furniture and a whole series of negative effects for the public in general (let’s take a strike in the cleaning service of a city as an example). When this type of phenomenon ends, it is common for an assessment of the damage caused to be made. After analyzing the consequences, an attempt is made to restore the situation as soon as possible.

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