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Snip: Dealing with difficult people
https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/communication-success/201309/ten-keys-handling-unreasonable-difficult-people 3. Shift from Being Reactive to Proactive Benefits: Minimize misinterpretation & misunderstanding. Concentrate energy on problem-solving. How: When you feel offended by someone’s words or deeds, come up with multiple ways of viewing the situation before reacting. For example, I may be tempted to think that my co-worker is ignoring my messages, or I…
Radio – Arthur Baysting on Legalising Marijuana
Arthur Baysting represented New Zealand composers and songwriters on the board of APRA for 18 years. During that time he lobbied with Mike Chunn and many others for increased New Zealand content on radio and television and for his efforts he was given the Inaugural OnFilm/Spada Industry Champion award in 2001. He’s known in Australia…
A world full of annoying sounds: What it’s like living with misophonia
A world full of annoying sounds: What it’s like living with misophonia http://www.stuff.co.nz/life-style/well-good/83366836/a-world-full-of-annoying-sounds-what-its-like-living-with-misophonia This is, as I’ve become aware in the past year, not just an adorable personality quirk: it’s misophonia (literally “hatred of sound”), or (the ironically sibilant) selective sound sensitivity syndrome. Or, as Broadly’s Callie Beusman’s amusing misophonia essay put it: “Every little…
Violent and sexual female offenders
Shaw and Dubois (1995) reviewed publications relating to violence by women from 1984 to 1994 and comment that violence by women has been neglected or avoided. Violent women, they say, are often perceived as masculine, mad, sad or evil. Skeem, Schubert, Stowman, Beeson, Mulvey, Gardner, et al. (2005) studied risk assessments by mental health professionals…
Don’t be afraid to change @mindfuleveryday
Don’t be afraid to change. You may lose something good but you may gain something better. #mindfulness — Everyday Mindfulness (@mindfuleveryday) September 17, 2014 Mindfulness is “the intentional, accepting and non-judgmental focus of one’s attention on the emotions, thoughts and sensations occurring in the present moment”,[1] which can be trained by meditational practices[1] derived from…