Posts

How Can You Tell How Biased a Question Is?

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How Can You Tell How Biased a Question Is? Simple ways to spot when a question is steering you High-level framing Biased questions don’t just seek information — they quietly steer it. Learning to recognize biased questions helps you think more clearly about surveys, news, meetings, and 1:1 conversations. In this post, we’ll walk through a simple checklist for spotting biased questions, a way to rewrite them, and why sometimes  biased questions are actually intentional and useful . You’ll also see why  perfect neutrality is impossible  and why the real skill is choosing your frame on purpose, not pretending you don’t have one. Why Biased Questions Matter Think of a biased question like a tilted pool table. You can still aim carefully, but the ball will always drift in one direction. Biased questions often: Smuggle in assumptions Use judgmental language Only invite one type of answer Example: “Why is our marketing team so bad at execution?” You’re not really being asked to ...

How Does Your Body Keep Score?

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How Does Your Body Keep Score? Why your nervous system is the historian of your life 🧠  Big Picture (Read This First) When we ask  “how does the body keep score” , we’re really asking how our experiences—stress, joy, trauma, habits, and even inherited biology—get recorded in our nervous system, muscles, gut, and hormones over time. Your body isn’t just reacting to today; it’s constantly updating a running “scoreboard” of safety vs. threat, rest vs. overload, shaped by both your choices and your circumstances. Zooming Out Think of your body as both a flight recorder and a dashboard: it stores what has happened and also flashes signals when limits are reached. That’s why old stress can show up as new symptoms—tight shoulders, migraines, stomach issues, burnout. Genetics, family patterns, and social realities like poverty or discrimination all influence how sensitive this system is and how much load it carries. Understanding this mind–body “scorekeeping” helps you see symptoms l...

How do you tell the difference between flexibility and self-betrayal?

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How do you tell the difference between flexibility and self-betrayal? Bending with life without secretly breaking your own spine. 💡  Big-picture framing We talk a lot about “being flexible,” especially at work and in relationships, but far less about the shadow side: when flexibility quietly turns into self-betrayal. The difference between flexibility and self-betrayal often comes down to  why  you’re saying yes and  how  you feel afterward. This question asks you to notice the subtle line between healthy adaptation and abandoning your own needs, values, or limits. When you learn to see that line clearly, you can stay open and collaborative  without  eroding your self-respect. In other words, it’s about becoming someone who can compromise on a plan, but not on their integrity. What’s the real difference between flexibility and self-betrayal? A simple way to start:  flexibility adjusts your  behavior ;  self-betrayal compromises your...

When Does Humility Become an Advantage—and When a Liability?

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When Does Humility Become an Advantage—and When a Liability? Finding the sweet spot between grounded and invisible. Framing the Question Humility as a competitive advantage sounds almost paradoxical in a world that rewards self-promotion and bold personal brands. Yet in the first 100 milliseconds of working with someone, we’re already sensing: “Do they think they’re better than me—or  worse  than they actually are?” The answer shapes trust, collaboration, and performance. The trick is that humility is not one thing; it’s a  dial , not an on/off switch. Turned up too low, you get arrogance and fragility. Turned up too high, you get self-erasure and missed opportunities. This post breaks down when humility makes you wildly effective—and the moments when it quietly turns into a liability. Why Humility Can Be a Competitive Advantage Think of humility as a  low-latency learning mode : it keeps your ego light so information can move fast. Healthy humility gives you an edge...