My Favorites September 2014: Great Stuff I’ve Found Recently

My monthly   “My Favorites”    routine includes posting links to great content I ran across, to encourage you to check them out if they sound interesting. Enjoy!

 

Does Being Happy Make You More Successful?

Most people believe that being successful will lead to greater happiness and sense of fulfillment. This is most likely true. But it is also true, believe it or not, thathappiness can lead to greater productivity and increased success.

Don’t believe me? Then watch this video from Soulpancake’s “Science of Happiness” series. It’s super scientific…sort of.

The Science of Happiness - If You're Happy and You Know It
The Science of Happiness – If You’re Happy and You Know It

 

And a more scientific approach on Success

Why do career “wins” often leave people feeling empty and dissatisfied? And – more important – how can you avoid that problem? Read Harvard Business Review’s What to Do When Success Feels Empty

 

And Seth Gordon’s take on Success

Most likely to succeed

“Succeed” is in the eye of the beholder…

Most likely to hit a home run

Most likely to please my boss

Most likely to do the work

Most likely to work for free

Most likely to stick it out

Most likely to change everything

Most likely to be trustworthy

Most likely to attract attention

Most likely to be invisible

Most likely to be worth it

There are many versions of most likely to succeed. When you’re looking for a gig or a client, the category you are placed in by those that choose is up to you. And no category = invisible.

 

On a different note: some pearls of wisdom

Mohandas Gandhi, when – allegedly – asked, “What do you think of Western Civilization?” replied, “I think it would be a good idea.”

In the same category: Chief Seattle’s “The Earth does not belong to man; man belongs to Earth.”

Finally, there is Einstein’s “Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler.”

 

Kudos Volkswagen

What a brilliant way to communicate how risky it is to use mobile phones while driving:

Volkswagen - Eyes on the road
Volkswagen – Eyes on the road

Smile, breathe, and go slowly!

Dieter Langenecker  
Dieter
 
 
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A Method to Find Balance

Despite the insipid title, work-life balance is a bit of a myth.

Sure, we work too much, don’t have time for all the other things we want to do, are always tired, eat convenience food or comfort food rather than nutritious or nourishing food, never have time for solitude … but that’s the life we want, right?

 OK, maybe it needs a bit of readjusting. Work and life and learning and relationships and health are all really the same thing, and so “balance” is perhaps the wrong word, but adjusting our lives to our aspired priorities is not a bad thing.

 A friend recently asked me how I balance my personal lives and all my projects, and it made me pause and think. And that pause, and the thinking, is really the key to it all, I discovered.

 So here’s the method I use.

  1. Pause regularly. In our lives, we are so busy and caught up in what we’re doing that we have no space for thinking. I build regular pauses into my life, so that I have some space for thought. What kind of pauses? I use morning meditation, drinking coffee in the morning with my notebook, my morning shower, a walk alone, tea or a run or other meeting with my wife or a friend, as space for thinking about my life. Pause regularly to create space.
  2. Zoom out. When you take a pause, zoom out from the close-up view, so you can look at the big picture. What are you doing with your life? What kind of person do you want to be? Are you making decisions in the aggregate? What are your priorities? And are you living those priorities? You don’t need to think about all of these things during each pause, but use the pauses for this kind of thinking.
  3. Readjust. When you notice that you’ve been spending too much time on the computer, and too little with your kids or other loved ones, make a note of it. When you notice that some important projects are being neglected, or you don’t have time for exercise, or your diet has gone to hell and settled in there, make a note. Think about what adjustments you can make.
  4. Now actually block off time. Making a note and mental adjustment is great, but it’s meaningless without action. What kind of action can you take to adjust how you actually spend your time? Make a commitment, on your calendar. Not one that you’ll skip when the time comes and you’re browsing your favorite sites. A commitment you’ll keep. For example, if you want to work out more, make a regular date with a friend to go for a run or do a bodyweight workout in the park or go to yoga class or go to the gym you signed up for 11 months ago and never use. Make a regular date. If you want to work on a project, make an appointment to go to a tea house or library for 3-4 hours just to work on that project. Or commit to a whole week of working on your novel. Tell somebody about it, and better yet commit to getting them the work by the end of the week (or whatever period you choose). Make the time, solidly.

That’s the method. Four steps, done regularly.

Life is a constant readjustment. It’s whether you readjust consciously that makes all the difference. (LB)

With kind regards,
DL color 5
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My Favorites: Great Stuff I’ve Found Recently

My monthly “My Favorites”    routine includes posting links to great content I ran across, to encourage you to check them out if they sound interesting. Enjoy!

 

25 Ways to Simplify Your Life in 10 Minutes or Less
While we’ve established that simplicity is a practice and not a destination, there are practical things you can do every day to simplify your life. And the good news is, there are practical things you can do quickly. Read’em here

 

 

 

Help Your Employees Find Flow

HolacracyResults-Only Work Environments. These new, more flexible ways of working may be a step too far for many organizations. Still, greater employee freedom can create a better sense of “flow,” which enhances engagement, retention, and performance. This can be achieved by loosening your grip on work practices – but you don’t have to let go completely: remove obstacles, set boundaries and meaningful goals, then let work take its course. Interesting article in the Harvard Business Review

 

 

Eckhart Tolle: The Deeper Dimensions of Stillness

 

And for laughs: Hilarious SWA flight attendant 

Hilarious SWA flight attendant

Smile, breathe, and go slowly!

Dieter Langenecker
Dieter

 

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Then it will really be a good day

A Moving Art original. This inspirational video was well responded at TED conferences, and filmmaker Louie Schwartzberg motivates those around him as happiness is revealed. Spoken word and music montage created and composed by Gary Malkin. Narration written and spoken by Brother David Steindl-Rast.

Smile, breathe and go slowly!
Dieter Langenecker
Dieter Langenecker
PS: If you want to know how to become a social entrepreneur or how to live a meaningful life in general get in touch with me 

 

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My Favorites: Great Stuff I’ve Found Recently

My monthly “My Favorites”    routine includes posting links to great content I ran across, to encourage you to check them out if they sound interesting. Enjoy!

 

Seth Gordon not only looks different, more importantly he also thinks differently

   

The generosity boomerang

Here’s conventional wisdom:

Success makes you happy. Happiness permits you to be generous.

In fact, it actually works like this:

Generosity makes you happy. Happy people are more likely to be successful.

 

It’s a compelling headline: Stop Trusting Yourself.  By Northeastern University psychologist David DeSteno, it’s featured in today’s NYTimes, and ostensibly shows that we mistakenly trust ourselves – that if anything, we mis-estimate our own trustworthiness more than that of others. Read this profound article by Charles H.Green

 

 
The Dreaded Curse of Comparison
Of all the lessons there are to learn in life, one stands out for me.  What is that lesson?  It’s learning to be myself. Read on.

 

   
   
 
 
Is Your Life A Super Highway or a Garden Path?

So many of us feel like our lives are a race – a dash. We are sprinting through the events of our lives to get them “all done.” We have amazing to-do lists; we are compelled to achieve and accomplish; society says this is how we get ahead. We pride ourselves on being so productive.

But what if, instead, the value of life were not in the dash and amount of things we do, but in the quality of life’s events – in the time we spend enjoying, connecting and becoming part of what we do? What if life were more like a garden path than a superhighway?

  

  

If you’re living in the northern hemisphere, and therefore – most likely/hopefully (you choose) – about to go on holidays, here are some book recommendations.

Smile, breathe, and go slowly!

Dieter Langenecker
Dieter

 

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The Best

It’s halftime whistle for 2014. And as always at this time of the year – the most inspiring, profound and interesting articles, videos, quotes, etc. I’ve found this year so far. Enjoy!

The future of our civilization is based on prudence, critical self reflection, belief in higher values, and wisdom in matters of ordinary, everyday life. It is not about grabbing as much as possible, as quickly as possible.     — Tyler Cowen, Economist

 

Life Lessons by Dr.Suneel Sethi
As we move from winters to spring and from spring to summers, I sit down to memorise the life lessons learnt during all the seasons of my life passed, to be used in the present and future .A recollection of these lessons I share with you here will provide you with a platform to start the journey of self development and improvement with me and some great ideas to ponder about. As you read along the list of suggestions and my life lessons, I hope you, too, would be on fire with focus, passion and outright excellence. Here are some of the life lessons I learnt during the various seasons of my life.

 

One World: Arianna Huffington on Viewing Life with a Wider Lens
So often in modern society, we look at success as being defined narrowly as attaining money and power. Particularly in the business world, there is a tendency to forget that there should be other measures of success including health, well-being, empathy and morality. These are the things that make up the Third Metric and there is a move by many in the business world to ensure that more emphasis is places on these things. Arianna Huffington is one business leader who is speaking passionately about this move.

 

Attraction
Attraction are a Hungarian theatre group, with a unique act of creating pictures with shadows of their bodies. Hear we see them performing to the track “Read All About It” by Emeli Sande, in the first week of auditions of Britain’s Got Talent. A must watch!
Why can’t we do that?
The Orangutan and the Hound Dog
The Orangutan and the Hound Dog
 
Fear is the Root of Your Problems 

Every problem you or I have (and they are many, small and large), is rooted in fear. For some, that might seem obvious: the question is how to beat the fears. For others, it’s not so self-evident: why are my financial or relationship or procrastination problems caused by fear?  Let us tackle both questions – the Why and the How.

Let me know if you liked it!
 
Smile, breathe and go slowly!
Dieter Langenecker  
Dieter Langenecker
 
PS: If you want to know how to become a social entrepreneur or how to live a meaningful life in general get in touch with me 

 

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My Favorites: Great Stuff I’ve Found Recently

My monthly “My Favorites”    routine includes posting links to great content I ran across, to encourage you to check them out if they sound interesting. Enjoy!

Greetings!

Today I want to present to you two relatively young and one very old concept of how to tackle today’s challenges:
 
Social entrepreneurship – the new heroes? 
Social entrepreneurship is the process of pursuing innovative solutions to social problems. More specifically, social entrepreneurs adopt a mission to create and sustain social value. They pursue opportunities to serve this mission, while continuously adapting and learning. They draw upon appropriate thinking in both the business and nonprofit worlds and operate in all kinds of organizations: large and small; new and old; religious and secular; nonprofit, for-profit, and hybrid.
Read more at:
and watch
Tim Kelley interviews Rich Tafel about Social Entrepreneurship
Sociocracy
Sociocracy is a system of governance, using consent-based decision making among equivalent individuals and an organizational structure based on cybernetic principles. The most recent implementation of sociocracy by Gerard Endenburg, also known as Circular Organizing, was developed as a new tool for governance of private enterprise, but has been adopted in many different kinds of organizations including public, private, non-profit and community organizations as well as professional associations.
Read more at

  

Vipassana

Far from some fluffy-pillowed-tropical-fruit-filled-yoga-on-the-beach type of retreat, the 10-day vipassana silent meditation retreat pushes you to your limits. It’s not a getaway or a vacation; instead, it’s an opportunity to work hard and reap the rewards of a clearer mind and higher levels of consciousness.

Read more at What I Learned From A Hardcore 10-Day Meditation Retreat

 

Smile, breathe, and go slowly!

Dieter Langenecker
Dieter

PS: If you want to comment, ask a question or inquire how personal mentoring can help you to live a meaningful life visit

 

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