âI cannot teach anybody anything. I can only make them think.â
Socrates
âWe donât have to defend what we know. Others opinions can never affect us in that way. We only feel the need to defend what weâre desperately trying to believeâ
Noah Elkrief
You donât get frustrated because of events; you get frustrated because of your beliefs.
Albert Ellis
âWhen you demand people to act a certain way, you threaten their autonomy, and so they naturally resist. When you let them arrive at a solution on their own (or with gentle guiding) theyâre more likely to comply.â
Chris Voss
Only one thing is more frightening than speaking your truth, and that is not speaking it
Naomi Wolf
âTact is the art of making a point without making an enemyâ.
Isaac Newton
âCritics generally criticize the work they most wish they did.â
Robin Sharma
âWhat are they hearing that I am not hearing?â
Martin Taylor
âSome peopleâs idea of free speech is that they are free to say what they like but if someone says anything back, that is an outrage.â
Winston Churchill
âPart of the happiness of life consists not in fighting battles, but in avoiding them. A masterly retreat is in itself a victory.â
Norman Vincent Peale
âThe problem with the world is that the intelligent people are full of doubts, while the stupid ones are full of confidence.â
âWe build too many walls and not enough bridges.â
Isaac Newton
âI can calculate the motions of the heavenly bodies, but not the madness of people.â
Isaac Newton
âIn true friendship, one can express anything and everything without feeling ashamed or afraid of being rejectedâ
Aparna Chatterjee
In the End, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends.
Martin Luther King Jr.
Loneliness does not come from having no people around you, but from being unable to communicate the things that seem important to you.
Carl Jung
(Being a good teammate) âIs all about ENGAGEMENT. You start paying attention to what the other person needs and wants.â
Kenny Smith
Learn to look at people as they really are and not as you would want them to be.
Sonny Carroll
All that gifted children need is a community around to prepare them for the world. The lesson is simple. However, it is striking how often we ignore it. The myths of the best and brightest and self-made man say that to get the maximum human potential, just identify the most promising people. We look at Bill Gates and say, in a spirit of self-congratulation: âOur world allowed that 13 year teenager to become a tremendously successful entrepreneur.â But thatâs the wrong lesson. The world only let a 13 years old person to access a time-sharing terminal in 1968. If a million teenagers had received a similar opportunity, how many other Microsofts exist today? When we misunderstand or ignore the real lessons of success, talents are wasted. If Canada created a second hockey league for children born in the second half of the year, the adult stars in this sport would double. Now multiply this lost potential for every field and profession. The world would be much richer than this where we settle.
Malcom Gladwell
Marita doesnât need a brand new school, with sparkling facilities and a multitude of sports courts. She doesnât need a laptop, a smaller class, a teacher with a Ph.D. or a bigger apartment. Also, doesnât need a higher IQ or a mind as agile as Chris Langan. All these things would be great, of course. But none of it reaches the heart of the matter. Marita just needs a chance, because people in her world rarely get even a single opportunity to succeed in life. And look at what was given to her: someone took a little bit of rice fields to the South Bronx and explained to her the miracle of meaningful work.
Malcom Gladwell
- The Mastery-Approach: âIt is important for me to perform as well as I can.â
- The Mastery-Avoidance: âI worry that I may not perform as well as I can.â
- The Performance-Approach: âIt is important for me to do well compared to others.â
- The Performance-Avoidance: âI just want to avoid doing worse than others.
When children perceive that success is dependent on how they stack up relative to others, they worry about not being able to live up to these expectations. After all, they have no control over how others will perform, so this just adds to the uncertainty and stress of the situation. Performing up to their own abilities may not be a sure thing either, but at least it is more in their control.â
Noah Kageyama
Project Aristotle is a reminder that when companies try to optimize everything, itâs sometimes easy to forget that success is often built on experiences â like emotional interactions and complicated conversations and discussions of who we want to be and how our teammates make us feel â that canât really be optimized.
How to give feedback without crushing someoneâs confidence (Part I):
Iâm giving you these comments because I have very high expectations and I know that you can reach them (i.e. criticism + high standards + assurance of ability).
How to giving feedback without crushing someoneâs confidence (Part II):
Iâm being critical because I have high standardsâ and âIâm holding you to these standards, even though they are challenging, because I believe that you have the potential to reach that level of excellence.â Doesnât this feel more empowering?
If a resolution is not reached, you can both walk away knowing why you failed to compromiseâyou are being true to your individual values, and you simply havenât found a way to make them intersectâfor now.
When people are inadvertently hurtful, calling them on their behaviour will give them a chance to change their ways and to make amends.
Usually hardworking people get the most criticism.
Distance doesnât ruin relationships. Doubt does.
In the best teams, members listen to one another and show sensitivity to feelings and needs.
Stop trying to impress people you donât love.
If people try to bring you down it just means youâre already above them.
Kill them with kindness
Most of the times, aggression will drive your enemy to do something that you are trying to prevent.
When we deny peopleâs feelings, the logical parts of their brain literally shut down.
When a person canât handle who you are, dumping you is really a sign that they know that they wonât be able to interact with you in the dysfunctional way theyâd like to.
When people are deliberately hurtful or just donât care, confronting them will bring out defensiveness or hostility, thereby revealing their true nature.
What has changed is that solidarity disappeared. When anyone was harassed, they got help from others, or at least their testimony. Nowadays they are alone before the harasser. This is particularly difficult to bear. Besides the fact of being harmed, they feel their friendsâ betrayal. They suddenly discovered that their working friends are cowards who refuse to testify the damage. They start to avoid the harmed one and no longer want to talk to them. This is where it becomes difficult to get out of the well, especially for those who like their work and for the most professionally involved.
Listen to what your friends tell you because they can (and will always) tell you the things you donât want to tell yourself.
A well-known principle of human behaviour says that when we ask someone to do us a favour we will be more successful if we provide a reason. People simply like to have reasons for what they do.â â The key word is âdo this BECAUSEâŠ
Getting together is a beginning; keeping together is progress; working together is success.
Transparency leaves less room for imagination that can easily create unnecessary drama.
Happiness is partly a choice to accept what you canât control and take control of what you can. You canât control everything that happens to you, but you can always control your response to what happens to you.
Live in such a way that if someone spoke badly of you no one would believe it.
âPotential Vs. Productâ AND âProdigy Vs. Hard Workâ
People tend to look at a Prodigy as a continuous Potential (a.k.a: a Product to be); and Product as the result of Hard Work.
Actually, a Prodigy has already spent a lot of (unnoticed) Hard Work into his/her craft. In our minds eyes, the Prodigy is closer to an already final Product then the actual Hard Worker. He passed the Potential stage. And continuous Hard Work rings out in our psychological memory has a Potential unfinished product.
So, âPotential is to Hard Workâ as âProdigy is to Product.â
Also, from the psychological point of view, a Prodigy (like, letâs say, Michael Jordan) is more likely to be admired (instead of envied) since the distance he is from common people doesnât allow us to relate to his achievements or abilities.
In the end, Hard Work builds Potential into a Product that we will, eventually, call Prodigy, the state of easiness that comes from mastering our craft.
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