One of the most surprising pieces of advice to come out of the wellbeing literature perhaps is the importance of developing your curiosity. At the simplest level, this is about actively seeking to ‘take notice’ of the sights, sounds and sensations around you and to savour these moments.
Mercy Ojohas quotedlast year
We usually assume that when we set ourselves a goal we will probably pursue it with focus and attention, drawing heavily on our slower, reflective system.
Soliloquios Literarioshas quotedlast year
It’s a curious and wonderful thing about the human condition that we are often a mystery to ourselves
b1745387005has quoted2 years ago
Think Small is not a checklist.
gesposaspahas quoted3 years ago
trengthening your social relationships;
getting healthy and active;
learning something new;
being more curious; and
giving to others.
Soliloquios Literarioshas quoted4 days ago
Experiments have repeatedly shown that losses hurt us about twice as much as equivalent gains, and that we ascribe most value to things we already possess (something which behavioural scientists call the ‘endowment effect
Soliloquios Literarioshas quoted4 days ago
So, when you are setting yourself a reward, do it in partnership with your commitment referee and ask them to enforce the terms of your binding commitment, which will include determining whether or not you deserve the rewards you have set yourself
Soliloquios Literarioshas quoted4 days ago
If you follow these four simple elements – link the reward to your ultimate objective; make it meaningful; make it binding; and use loss aversion – your reward will likely spur you to your goal more quickly