Friday, July 12, 2013

Interesting articles by ChangeThis

“People have come to believe that suffering is now part of working life, and are suffering more than ever. Tough economic times have left fewer people to do the same amount of work. Jobs people used to love have become overwhelming; jobs they never loved have become intolerable. Success seems like an impossible dream as people strive to do more with less. They’ve seen good people get laid off and good jobs outsourced to cheaper workers. This is madness. It is not an imagination. But there is hope.

In some of the worst circumstances, it is still possible to find people who are performing well and are happy. This article will provide you with some tips for how you too can be a happy, high performer—a high value player.”


The 8 Blind Spots Between Men and Women at Work by Barbara Annis & John Gray, Ph.D.
“When driving a car, our side and rear view mirrors don’t often reveal everything we need to see. We find we have blind spots and have to turn our head so as not hit something. We don’t resist the fact that we have blind spots or deny that they exist; we accept their presence and make every effort to improve our vision. We do it to be less of a hazard to others and to ourselves.

Quite similar are the obstructions that prevent men and women from seeing the other gender in the clearest possible light—misperceptions we call Gender Blind Spots. […]

Considering the implications in our personal lives, at our workplace, and for society as a whole, it’s time for a shift in our thinking. We need to step up to a new level of conversation and begin to include each other and participate with each other more successfully. We need a better understanding of why men and women think and act as they do. We need to see the strength in the complement of those differences. We need to be more gender-intelligent.”

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