Help and Support everybody around the world
43.5K views | +4 today
Follow
Help and Support everybody around the world
Making the help and information to every body
Curated by Ricard Lloria
Your new post is loading...
Your new post is loading...
Rescooped by Ricard Lloria from Business Brainpower with the Human Touch
Scoop.it!

3 Strategies To Accept Positive Feedback And Own Your Successes

3 Strategies To Accept Positive Feedback And Own Your Successes | Help and Support everybody around the world | Scoop.it

Let's call this call this curator friend Cynthia. Cynthia wrote back, “Two other curators worked with me on this (and may join us!), so I can’t take full credit.” She asked that I instead reference her with the significantly less exciting descriptor, “one of the curators of this exhibition." She was understandably hesitant to get all the credit and wanted to make clear that there were other people involved with the exhibition. While accurate, the new version was far less descriptive and complimentary than what I’d suggested.

Feel familiar? The balancing act women navigate surrounding self promotion can be exhausting.


Via The Learning Factor
The Learning Factor's curator insight, April 25, 2017 7:08 PM

The balancing act women navigate surrounding self promotion can be exhausting. Here are 3 strategies to make it easier.

kernelweighted's comment, April 26, 2017 2:11 AM
Really Good
Jerry Busone's curator insight, April 29, 2017 10:57 AM

insight on handing the good with the constructive 

Rescooped by Ricard Lloria from Business Brainpower with the Human Touch
Scoop.it!

Want to Have More Creative Breakthroughs? Redesign Your Day According to This Step-by-Step Guide

Want to Have More Creative Breakthroughs? Redesign Your Day According to This Step-by-Step Guide | Help and Support everybody around the world | Scoop.it

You stare at a blank screen for what seems like hours, waiting for your brain to come up with a brilliant idea, and it never comes. There has to be a better way to brainstorm, right?

 

There is--and it might be as simple as doing the laundry.

 

In the new book The Net and the Butterfly: The Art and Practice of Breakthrough Thinking, Olivia Fox Cabane and Judah Pollack--former faculty members of Stanford's Start X incubator program--explain how breakthrough insights come about. The two describe these insights as "that feeling of sudden clarity when you feel the answer staring you in the face."

 

"The biggest misconception about breakthroughs is that they're accidental or that they're spontaneous," says Fox Cabane. "But in reality that aha! moment is just the tip of the iceberg. It is the single conscious moment you have at the end of a very long, complex, unconscious process."

 

To understand how to prime the human brain for creative breakthroughs, one must first understand what parts of the brain help power them. As Fox Cabane and Pollack explain, the brain has two networks: the executive network, which is the "goal-oriented" part of your brain that you access to complete an action; and the default network, the part of your brain that's home to what the authors call the "genius lounge," or the place where creative insights lie. But, to access the genius lounge, your brain needs to tune out the executive network.


Via The Learning Factor
The Learning Factor's curator insight, February 12, 2017 6:40 PM

The authors of a new book on the art of breakthrough thinking explain how designing your day more thoughtfully can get your creative juices flowing.