June 2012
35 posts
Richard Brody: “Given a choice, I’d rather see a movie by a good bad director than one by a bad good one…”
William Deresiewicz in A Jane Austen Education: How Six Novels Taught Me About Love, Friendship, and the Things That Really Matter.
Also see why a healthy relationship with erring is essential to happiness, what psychology tells us about being wrong, and how famous creators feel about the fear of failure.
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(via explore-blog)
The Kindness Hack - Catherine Rampell via NY Times
Researchers at Wharton, Yale and Harvard have figured out how to make employees feel less pressed for time: force them to help others. According to a recent study, giving workers menial tasks or, surprisingly, longer breaks actually leads them to believe that they have less time, while having them write to a sick child, for instance, makes them feel more in control and “willing to commit to future engagements despite their busy schedules.” The idea is that completing an altruistic task increases your sense of productivity, which in turn boosts your confidence about finishing everything else you need to do.