Feel-Good Productivity: How to Do More of What Matters to You
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‘If the treatment isn’t working, question the diagnosis.’
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concerning dependence on caffeine.
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feeling good doesn’t just end with feeling good. It actually changes our patterns of thought and behaviour.
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in a positive mood, participants were able to see a broader range of potential solutions.
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Positive emotions are the fuel that drives the engine of human flourishing.
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Put simply: success doesn’t lead to feeling good. Feeling good leads to success.
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It’s about doing more of what matters to you. It’ll help you learn more about yourself, what you love and what really motivates you.
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We’ll delve into the three different types of burnout – overexertion burnout, depletion burnout and misalignment burnout.
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Life is stressful. Play makes it fun.
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whether taking a new route to work or trying a different coffee shop rather than sticking to their regular one – felt happier, more excited and more relaxed. Their conclusion: an adventurous life holds the key to unlocking positive emotions.
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we can learn to focus on the process, rather than the outcome, we’re substantially more likely to enjoy a task.
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failure would be just as valuable as success.
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No failure is ever just a failure. It’s an invitation to try something new.
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‘It’s a beautiful day to save lives. Let’s have some fun.’
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approach things with a sense of adventure.
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element of fun in every task,
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approach your work with less seriousness and more sincerity?
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confident about our ability to complete a task makes us feel good when we’re doing it, and helps us do it better.
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you can is the first step to making sure you actually can.
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confidence isn’t something you’re born with; it’s something you learn.
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immersing yourself in vicarious success, you’ll be building a powerful story in your own mind: that if they can, you can too.
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In the years since, researchers in the field of human intelligence have suggested that perhaps older siblings on average have higher IQs and perform better in school than their
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‘flipping the confidence switch’ – and playing the role of someone who’s already filled
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take ownership,
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These are the people who uplift your spirits and fill you with energy. You want to be around them.
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I didn’t like about medical school was the sense of competition. Everyone
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When the going gets tough, it’s better to have friends to lean on than enemies to lord
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Instead, emphasise the positive reasons for why you’re going to that specific person for advice: ‘I saw your work on X, Y, Z and it really had an impact on me. I would love to hear how you did A, B, C.’ By emphasising the positive aspects of the person you admire, they’ll think you genuinely value their opinion – and be more likely to help you.
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quid pro quo.
eunice
something for something
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try to make your overcommunication about the good as positive and as uplifting as possible.
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starts with becoming a team player. Try treating the people you’re working with
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Knowledge is power. Getting to know our fears is the first step towards overcoming them. Handled right, it could even take less than seven years.
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our fears are broader: less about specific problems, more about our wider identities.
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I’m experiencing self-doubt, a favourite label for myself is ‘lifelong learner’.
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lifelong learner would never get stuck in a procrastination rut for long.
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They’re tools that help us make sense of who we are. If we can change our labels, we can often change our behaviour.
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failures we’re worried about now aren’t the ones that will always define us.
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We can’t eradicate all our fears. We need to overcome them. That means finding a way to move from fear to courage. And it begins with changing the way that you’re seen by the most important person in your life: you.
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mindset of ‘no one cares’ can be totally transformative. It’s one of the simplest methods I’ve identified to reduce my anxiety-related procrastination.
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I am confident. I am fearless. I am unstoppable.
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‘layer of self-deception’.
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yourself some slack and celebrate the small wins.
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‘feelings of energy depletion or exhaustion; increased mental distance from one’s job, or feelings of negativism or cynicism related to one’s job; and reduced professional efficacy’.
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it isn’t related to the number of hours you’re working – it’s about how you feel.
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realised, come from the negative emotions that arise when we do too much, too fast.
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We sprint all the time.
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Do less, so that you can unlock more.
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‘Begin again’ when I find myself getting distracted. It’s a powerful reminder. Don’t fail with abandon. Regardless of how you’ve done
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conclusion was simple: adding a break of just ten minutes between two tasks that require self-control seems to help combat overexertion.
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find moments in your working day to do nothing. And embrace them.
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