John Peterson - Don’t let a good crisis go to waste
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John Peterson - Don’t let a good crisis go to waste

There are these moment - often shitty - where things become clear. Where you’ve got clarity to what’s important and what’s not. In those moments, we tell ourselves that we’ll start doing things differently. But afterwards, we just go back to business as usual. In this article, John encourages you to - in that moment - make the changes in such a way that you’re committed and can’t back out. That you can’t not follow up on your intention. By already making the appointment. Calling somebody up. Sending in that resignation. Because a week from that moment, all urgency is gone.

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How success is making progress instead of getting results
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How success is making progress instead of getting results

Big projects are exciting. They can generate more or deeper results than many small ones. However, big projects can be too big. Or at the very least, appear too big. They’re daunting. Stifling. How do you get started anyway? And how do you stay motivated when the results don't seem to come?

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Chris Sacca's commencement address at the Carlson School of Management
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Chris Sacca's commencement address at the Carlson School of Management

Sacca is a sort of investor wunderkind. One of - if not - the most successful ever. He also looks in no way like an investor. Here he shares 7 lessons to the just graduated students. (1) Ctrl-Alt-Delete: Start with a clean slate. (2) Be present: It makes every experience better and richer. (3) Play offense: What's YOUR to-do list? And more!

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Gabriel Popkin - Is it foolish to model nature’s complexity with equations?
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Gabriel Popkin - Is it foolish to model nature’s complexity with equations?

Is it possible to model nature? We run into all sorts of problems with ecological models. And do we have to use equations? Chaos Theory can do neat tricks. It can link variables that are don’t cause the effect to predict the effect. What? Yeah! Check this one out if you dare. It’s not as complex as it sounds :).

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Simon Parkin - The Brain in the Machine
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Simon Parkin - The Brain in the Machine

Steve Grand. This guy! Holy smokes. He’s programming animals. But he’s not mimicking the behavior of animals in code. He’s programming them on an almost cellular level. Programming virtual neurons and enzymes. Animals get hungry, need to go hunting. To go hunting, they need to scout the surroundings. To do that they need to learn to move. Etc. It’s an insanely big project. That he does by himself!

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William Deresiewicz (The Atlantic) - The Death of the Artist and the birth of the Creative Entrepreneur
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William Deresiewicz (The Atlantic) - The Death of the Artist and the birth of the Creative Entrepreneur

Very interesting read about the changing role of an artist these the past centuries. From the low-class artisan to the artist as a solitary genius. And what are the implications of the current form of creative and diversified entrepreneurs? Where 10,000 contacts are more important than the 10,000 hours. Where it is every man for himself and art becomes a commodity. Becomes entertainment.

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Dan Pallotta (TED) - The way we think about charity is dead wrong
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Dan Pallotta (TED) - The way we think about charity is dead wrong

NGOs have to play by different rules than companies. NGO’s have to be very conservative in areas like compensation, marketing, taking risks, the time pressure and profits. The nature of working with donations causes some of it. But when we see that it cripples these organizations that do good work. Why do we continue with this story? Dan Pallotta delivers a great and clean talk to address this.

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How to grow faster by focussing on behavior instead of on yourself.
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How to grow faster by focussing on behavior instead of on yourself.

Can failing be positive? 

This mindset is about focussing on your actions instead of on yourself. By doing so, succeeding or failing become a result of what you did. Not of who you are.

It’s about judging whether you did well by focussing on effort instead of on ability. You focus on whether you tried. Whether you showed up. Being able to do it or having chosen the right solution is less relevant.

It’s about a switch from believing in the self to believing in behavior. From talent to practice. From “I am the way I am” to “I can grow and improve myself”.

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Why acceptance doesn't lead to stagnation but unleashes you.
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Why acceptance doesn't lead to stagnation but unleashes you.

As a competitive person, I want to achieve things. Set goals and reach them. And as someone who meditates, I want to be present and accept reality as is. But if I want to accept reality, why would I want to change it? Paradox-alert!

Mindfulness practice preaches the acceptance of the now. That seems to contradict wanting to compete and improve things. In itself, there is absolutely nothing wrong with having goals or wanting things. They can drive change to improve your life.

However, these goals need to come from a healthy foundation. So, acceptance becomes a prerequisite. It is a state from which you can start with improving. Let me explain what I mean.

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Sara Goldstein - 30 questions to ask your kid instead of “How was your day"
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Sara Goldstein - 30 questions to ask your kid instead of “How was your day"

Ah! My favorite hobby. Questions :). "How was your day”. Eeeh “fine” is about as far as you can get. It’s not a very powerful starter. It lacks context. Great alternatives in here. Like "What was the nicest thing you did for someone else?” Or of course: "Which one of your teachers would survive a zombie apocalypse? Why?” And the best part, this must work for grown-ups as well!

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