The essence of the self-help movement is that we should decide to be happy. Follow this link to the references that 40% of our happiness is what we intend. We set out to have a good or bad time? I haven’t read this yet, so I need to log on to Amazon and put this on my wish list.
Leave a CommentAuthor: Jo Jordan
Unfortunately I wasn’t able to attend Tal Ben-Shahar’s presentations in Scotland earlier this month, so I was delighted to find this link on the Happiness Institute to his appearance on a US talkshow.
UPDATE: I believe Tal Ben-Shahar has moved to Penn Uni and is running an online course on happiness from there.
Leave a CommentA link trail on designing organizations around possibilities rather than constraints from Wayne Hall at Idea Festival.
Leave a CommentPositivism or positive psychology?
The words sound so similar yet have almost the opposite meanings. This is the difference.
I’ll believe it when I see it or I will see it when I believe it.
I’ve been familiar with the Desiderata since I was a child (it was popularised by a pop singer in the sixties, wasn’t it?) and I have just re-read it.
Now I read the poetry of David Whyte, Otto Scharmer’s work on presencing, ideas of emergence behind The Legend of Bagger Vance, I see and hear a lot more in this well-quoted poem.
Leave a CommentA link to Martin Seligman’s paper summarizing progress in positive psychology – now a few years old, but a good place to start for the classically trained psychologist.
UPDATE: Primer in positive psychology
Leave a CommentThanks to Jon Ingham, I had a look at a Melcrum report on employee engagement. 29% of employers who use a formal scheme to engage employees use appreciative inquiry. Well 29% of 25% is 8% – that is a lot of employers. That is the most welcome news of 2008.
Anyone else interested in this, particularly if you are in the UK, please do contact me.
One CommentHow to figure out what you love to do and to get closer to your goal – a step-by-step guide.
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Mark McGuiness has interviewed coaches for the creative industries in the UK for his Master’s thesis.
UPDATE: How is Mark McGuiness doing? I see him on LinkedIn sometimes.
The creative industries in UK account for about 8% of the GDP, I believe.
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