by Rick Baker
On Sep 30, 2020
The Thinking Behind The Tweet
Actually, the question should be -
Is the glass at least both half-full and half-empty?
Rather than limit people to 2 ways of thinking and claiming one is optimistic and the other pessimistic, we ought to encourage people toview Situations and People's actions from multiple perspectives...by, for example, encouraging people to use tools like Edward de Bono's 'Six Thinking Hats'.
In some Situations, it is appropriate to consider what has been added while in others it is appropriate to consider what has been subtracted. Sometimes we need to consider possibilities. Other times we need to identify the need for urgent action.
This goes beyond optimism, pessimism, and realism. While that 'mindset' differentiation may be important, with people or with situations, it also may not be important.
Situations & People deserve a lot more thinking than optimism/pessimism tests.
PS: That glass-half-full-glass-half-empty saying has always annoyed me. It is too cliché and it puts people into a 2-dimensional box when all of us know we live in at least a 3-dimensional world.
by Rick Baker
On Sep 29, 2020
The Thinking Behind The Tweet
Often invisible to us: because we are biased.
Seen clearly by others: because they are biased.
As the saying goes - "Perceptions are Reality."
[Reality is such a biased illusion.]
by Rick Baker
On Sep 28, 2020
The Thinking Behind the Tweet
That's a Spirited Leaders' definition. Some say Ego is a flaw. For example, if I understand him accurately, Eckhart Tolle considers Ego to be a pain body that really provides no benefit. [And I have a great deal of respect for Eckhart Tolle.] I think Ego is a valuable piece of the human condition but it is only valuable when people self-monitor and self-regulate to make sure Ego stays within boundaries of moderation.